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college of arts and letters
College of Arts and
Letters
The College of Arts and Letters is the oldest, and
traditionally the largest, of the four undergraduate
colleges of the University of Notre Dame. It houses
17 departments and several programs through which
students at both undergraduate and graduate levels
pursue the study of the fine arts, the humanities and
the social sciences.
Liberal Education. The College of Arts and Letters
provides a contemporary version of a traditional
liberal arts educational program. In the college,
students have the opportunity to understand themselves as heirs of a rich intellectual and spiritual
tradition and as members of a complex national
and international society. The faculty of the college
are committed to the life of the mind, to the critical and constructive engagement with the whole of
human experience. On the basis of a firm yet broad
foundation, graduates of the college are equipped for
a lifetime of learning in an ever-changing world. The
overall curriculum and the specific major programs
encourage students to approach issues reflectively, to
analyze them carefully and to express their reasoned
conclusions with clarity.
The intellectual quest conducted in the College of
Arts and Letters takes place in an explicitly Catholic
environment. Here ultimate questions of the meaning and value of human life before God are welcome,
and efforts to deal with such questions utilize the
immense resources of the Catholic tradition. Inquiry
and faith are seen not as opposing forces but as
complementary elements of the fully human pursuit
of truth.
Organization. The college’s administrative center,
the Office for Undergraduate Studies, is located in
104 O’Shaughnessy Hall. Sophomores who have not
yet declared a major and students of all levels in the
college with questions about college or University
requirements should seek advising there. Staff members are also available to discuss academic progress,
problems or career goals with all students. Pre-law
and preprofessional advisors are also available in this
office.
Because education is not limited to the classroom,
the college also sponsors or helps to subsidize events
which are intended to enrich the undergraduate
experience and facilitate faculty-student interaction
both on and off campus.
Curricula and Degrees. The College of Arts and Letters offers curricula leading to the degree of bachelor
of fine arts in Art (Studio and Design) and of bachelor of arts in:
American Studies
Anthropology
Arabic Studies
Art:
Art History
Design
Studio
Classics:
Arabic
Classical Civilization
Greek
Latin
East Asian Languages and Literatures:
Chinese
Japanese
Economics
English
Film, Television, and Theatre
German and Russian Languages and Literatures:
German
Russian
History
Mathematics (honors only)
Medieval Studies
Music
Philosophy
Philosophy/Theology (joint major)
Political Science
Program of Liberal Studies
Psychology
Romance Languages and Literatures:
French and Francophone Studies
Italian
Romance Languages and Literatures
Spanish
Sociology
Theology
The college also offers supplementary majors, but
not stand-alone first or degree-yielding majors, in:
Arts and Letters Preprofessional Studies (ALPP)
African and African American Studies, Africana
Studies
Art History (24 hours)
Chinese (24 hours)
Classical Civilization
Computer Applications (CAPP)
French and Francophone Studies (24 hours)
FTT–­­­Theatre (24 hours)
Gender Studies
German (24 hours)
Greek (24 hours)
French (24 hours)
History (24 hours)
Italian (24 hours)
Japanese (24 hours)
Latin (24 hours)
Mathematics (42 hours)
Medieval Studies (24 hours)
Peace Studies (24 hours)
Philosophy (24 hours)
Russian (24 hours)
Spanish (24 hours)
Theology (25 hours)
Admission Policies. Admission to the College of Arts
and Letters takes place at the end of the first year.
The student body of the College of Arts and Letters
thus comprises sophomores, juniors and seniors.
The prerequisite for admission of sophomores into
the College of Arts and Letters is good standing at
the end of the student’s first year.
The student must have completed at least 24 credit
hours and must have satisfied all of the specified
course requirements of the First Year of Studies
Program: University Seminar; Composition; two
semester courses in mathematics; two semester
courses in natural science; one semester course chosen from history, social science, philosophy, theology,
literature or fine arts; and two semester courses in
physical education or in ROTC. (The University
seminar will satisfy the relevant requirement in fine
arts, literature, history, social science, philosophy or
theology.) Two semesters of physical education are
also required. A student who does not meet all of
these conditions is retained in the First Year of Studies until all of the conditions are met. The deficiencies must be removed at the Notre Dame Summer
Session or in the student’s third semester at Notre
Dame.
Description of General College Requirements.
Every student graduating from the College of Arts
and Letters must have a minimum of 120 credit
hours and must have fulfilled all University, college
and major requirements. Unless special permission
has been obtained from the Office for Undergraduate Studies, special studies and directed readings courses do not satisfy university or college
requirements.
University Requirements Courses
Composition
1
Mathematics 2
Natural Science
2
*History
1
*Social Science
1
*Theology
2
*Philosophy
2
*Fine Arts or Literature
1
(Physical Education-two hours)
2
——
14 courses
* One of these requirements must be a University
Seminar 180.
Arts and Letters Requirements
College Seminar
Language
+History/Social Science
*Literature or Fine Arts
(whichever is not taken above)
Major
2
1–3
1
1
8–12
+ In addition to the University requirement of one history and one social science course, the college requires
a third course, which can be either history or social
science.
* The arts and letters student is required to complete one
fine arts and one literature course.
University requirements are described under
“Degree Requirements,” in the front section of this
Bulletin.
Course Load. The normal course load in the College
of Arts and Letters is five courses. The maximum
number of credit hours per semester is 17. Overloads
for juniors and seniors are accepted only with the
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college of arts and letters
permission of the deans in the Office for Undergraduate Studies and only during the designated days
of the enrollment period.
Writing Requirement. Students in arts and letters
are required to complete one course in their major
at the 30000 or 40000 level designated as a writing
intensive course. This course may satisfy other distributional requirements within the major. Writing
intensive courses require the student to work closely
with a professor throughout the semester on a significant written project.
Activity and Experiential Learning Courses. Three
elective credits of the required 120 hours can be
derived/obtained from the following activity courses:
Band (Marching and Concert)
Orchestra
Chorale
Glee Club
Liturgical Choir
Folk Choir
Music Lessons and Ensembles
Ballet
Debate
Social Concerns Seminars
Exceptions will be made for music majors.
Registering for these courses will not affect a
student’s overload status. These credits do not count
toward a student’s 17 semester hours. If students
complete more than three of these courses, these will
appear on a student’s transcript, but the extra credits
will be subtracted from the student’s total number
of hours at the time the graduation check is made;
hence, these will not count toward the 120 hours
needed to graduate.
Pass-Fail. Juniors and seniors may take one nonmajor, non-required elective course each semester on
a pass-fail grading basis. These declarations must be
made during the enrollment period of each semester,
and once made, these declarations are irreversible.
Arts and Letters Degree Credit. Students should
not have both examination and degree credit for
the same course. For example, students should take
either Theology 10001 or 20001 and Philosophy
10101 or 20101, but not both. Economics 10015
and 20015 are considered to be equivalent courses,
as are Economics 20020 and 20010. Students
should take only one of each pair but not both.
In cases where students have double credit for the
same course , the credits for only one course will be
counted toward a student’s degree credit despite the
fact that credits for both will appear on the student’s
transcript. A list of equivalent math and science
courses can be found under “Mathematics,” later
in this section of the Bulletin. The same rules about
double credit apply to them.
No courses in logic will satisfy the University philosophy requirement for students in arts and letters.
After matriculation into the college, it is the expectation that arts and letters students will complete any
outstanding math or science requirements at Notre
Dame.
ROTC. First-year students enrolled in any of the
three ROTC programs are exempted from the
University’s physical education requirement. Credits
received for 10000- and 20000-level ROTC courses
do not count toward a student’s 120 credit hours, despite the fact that they appear on the transcript. They
will be manually subtracted from the student’s total
number of hours appearing thereon. The College of
Arts and Letters accepts a maximum of 12 free elective credits only for ROTC students from the 30000and 40000-level military sciences only. Non-ROTC
students may not take ROTC courses for credit
toward graduation except by special permission obtained in advance of registering for the course from
the deans in the Office for Undergraduate Studies.
If a non-ROTC student registers in ROTC classes
without first acquiring permission, these credits will
appear on the student’s transcript, but the credits
will be subtracted manually from the student’s total
hours at the time the graduation check is made.
Dual Degree. Programs leading to dual degrees (two
undergraduate degrees, such as a bachelor of arts and
a bachelor of business administration) are distinct
from programs in which a student receives one degree with two majors (such as a bachelor of business
administration with a major in finance and a major
in political science). Dual degree programs require
the permission of the deans of both colleges. There
are additional requirements which usually result in
the need for a fifth year. Dual degree students in the
college are required to take the Arts and Letters College Seminar.
The requirements for a dual degree generally are as
follows: The student completes all of the University
requirements, all of the requirements for both colleges, all of the requirements for both majors, and
the total number of degree credits specified for a
dual degree in two colleges. While the total number
of hours required does depend on the two major
programs, the minimum required total number of
degree credits is set to be 30 degree credits beyond
the college total for the college with the greater number of degree credits.
International Studies. In light of the expansion
of Notre Dame’s international study programs,
the provost’s office has asked that students be
encouraged to participate in University programs
whenever possible. Limited exceptions, however, will
be made for students whose academic or programmatic needs cannot be met through existing Notre
Dame programs, i.e., Chinese or Russian majors who
wish to pursue language instruction in Beijing or St.
Petersburg, or art history majors who may require a
semester in Florence. These exceptions will be made
on an individual basis after extensive consultation
with both the students and their faculty advisors.
Student Awards
and Prizes
COLLEGIATE AWARD IN MODERN
AND CLASSICAL LANGUAGES
The Robert D. Nuner Modern and Classical Language Award—presented to the graduating senior in
the College of Arts and Letters with a first or second
major, in any classical or modern foreign language,
who has earned the highest cumulative grade point
average.
AMERICAN STUDIES
James E. Murphy Award for Excellence in Journalism—
open to graduating American sudies majors or
non-majors with an interdisciplinary minor in Journalism, Ethics and Democracy.
Paul Neville Award for Journalism—awarded to a
senior in American studies for excellence in
journalism.
Hugh A. O’Donnell Award in American Studies—
awarded to a senior in American studies for superior
academic achievement.
Prof. James Withey Award—awarded to a senior in
American studies for notable achievement in
writing.
ANTHROPOLOGY
The Kenneth E. Moore Founding Chair Award—
awarded to the outstanding senior in cultural
anthropology.
The Rev. Raymond W. Murray, CSC, Award in Anthropology—awarded to the outstanding senior majoring
in anthropology.
ART, ART HISTORY, AND DESIGN
Grief Art Awards—awarded to outstanding senior
BFA students to defray the cost of their thesis
exhibitions.
Emil Jacques Medals for Work in the Fine Arts—The
department awards a gold medal and a silver medal
for excellence in studio art to undergraduates pursuing a BFA.
Mabel L. Mountain Memorial Art Award—awarded
for excellence in studio art.
The Radwan and Allan Riley Prize in Design—awarded to a senior design major for excellence in his or
her respective field.
The Radwan and Allan Riley Prize in Studio Art—
awarded to a senior studio art major for excellence in
his or her respective field.
The Radwan and Allan Riley Prize in Art History
and Criticism—awarded for the best essay in art history or criticism submitted by an undergraduate or
graduate student.
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college of arts and letters
Eugene M. Riley Prize in Photography—awarded to an
undergraduate or graduate photography major for
excellence in photography.
The Richard T. Sullivan Award for Fiction Writing—
awarded to the undergraduate who submits the best
original fiction manuscript.
Judith A. Wrappe Memorial Award—awarded to an
outstanding junior studio/design major. It is presented at the beginning of the student’s senior year
of study.
FILM, TELEVISION, AND THEATRE
ARTS AND LETTERS
PREPROFESSIONAL
The Dr. Robert Joseph Barnet Award—presented to an
outstanding Arts and Letters preprofessional senior
who has demonstrated, in addition to excellent character, superior academic achievement across the arts
and sciences.
MUSIC
Catherine Hicks Award—This award was established
by Catherine Hicks (BA ’74—Saint Mary’s) of Los
Angeles and goes to the outstanding graduating
senior in theatre.
PHILOSOPHY
GENDER STUDIES
The David and Shari Boehnen Internship Awards—
awarded for outstanding summer internships won by
Gender Studies students.
CLASSICS
GERMAN AND RUSSIAN
LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES
EAST ASIAN LANGUAGES
AND LITERATURES
Departmental Awards in Chinese and Japanese—
awards given when merited to graduating seniors for
excellence in Chinese and Japanese language studies.
ECONOMICS
The Weber Award—awarded to the senior economics
major who has achieved the highest academic
average.
John Harold Sheehan Prize Essay Award—given to
the senior economics major who has written the best
senior honors essay in economics.
The John Joyce Award on the American Worker—The
award is given as merited to the best undergraduate
short story or poem on the “American Worker,” by
the Higgins Labor Research Center and the Economics Department. (There is also a graduate award
for the best graduate essay).
ENGLISH
The Academy of American Poets Award—awarded to
the undergraduate or graduate student submitting
the best collection of original poetry.
The Ernest Sandeen Poetry Award—awarded to the
best original poetry submitted by an undergraduate.
Eleanor Meehan Medal for Literary Merit—presented
to the English major who submits the best original
critical essay written for an English course.
Michel Prize in Medieval Studies—given to graduating senior who has written the best essay on a
medieval subject.
Joseph P. O’Toole Jr. Award—The award was established by Joseph P. O’Toole Jr. (BA, 1948) of San
Jose, California, and goes to the outstanding graduating senior in film and television.
The Dr. John E. Burke Award—presented to an
outstanding Arts and Letter preprofessional senior
who has demonstrated, in addition to excellent academic achievement, outstanding leadership qualities
through service within and/or beyond the Notre
Dame community.
Departmental Award in Greek, Latin, or Arabic—
awarded when merited to a graduating senior for
excellence in study of: Greek, Latin or Arabic.
MEDIEVAL STUDIES
Gender Studies Outstanding Essay Award—awarded to
the best undergraduate essay.
The Rev. Lawrence G. Broestl, CSC, Award—presented to the graduating senior with the best academic achievement in German.
Jeffrey Engelmeier Award—presented to the outstanding student of German whose leadership and
contribution to the life of the department are especially conspicuous.
Delta Phi Alpha German Honor Society Award—
awarded to a graduating senior for outstanding
achievement in the study of German language and
literature.
The Russian Language and Literature Award—presented to the graduating senior with the best academic achievement in Russian.
The Lauren B. Thomas Scholarship—Awarded by the
Russian faculty to an outstanding Russian major
who exhibits financial need.
HISTORY
The Monsignor Francis A. O’Brien Prize—presented
to the senior who has achieved distinction in the best
essay in history.
The O’Hagan Award—awarded to the undergraduate
who has submitted the best original essay on a phase
of Irish history.
The O’Connell Award—an annual award for the best
sophomore or junior essay in history.
LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES
John J. Kennedy Prize for Latin American Studies—
awarded to the senior who has written an outstanding essay on Latin America. (Occasionally there
is a runner-up award).
Department of Music Senior Award—awarded to the
outstanding senior in the Music Department.
The Dockweiler Medal for Philosophy—presented
to the senior submitting the best essay on a philosophical subject.
The John A. Oesterle Award in Philosophy—awards
given when merited to graduating philosophy majors
for excellence in philosophy.
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Paul Bartholomew Essay Prize—awarded to the senior
major submitting the best senior honors essay in the
fields of American politics or political theory.
The Stephen Kertesz Prize—awarded to a senior major
submitting the best senior honors essay in the fields
of international relations or comparative politics.
PROGRAM OF LIBERAL STUDIES
The Edward J. Cronin Award—awarded annually to
a student in the Program of Liberal Studies for excellence in writing in regular course work.
The Willis D. Nutting Award—given to the senior
major who has contributed most to the education of
fellow students.
The Otto A. Bird Award—awarded to the senior in
the Program of Liberal Studies who has written the
best senior essay.
PSYCHOLOGY
Senior Recognition Award in Psychology—given in
recognition of outstanding achievement in research,
academic performance, and student-life activities,
while pursuing a major course of study in
psychology.
The John F. Santos Award for Distinctive Achievement in Psychology—to a senior psychology major in
recognition of outstanding achievement in research,
academic performance, and student-life activities.
ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND
LITERATURES
Walter Langford Awards for Excellence in Spanish
Literature and Excellence in French Literature—two
awards—to the graduating senior majors in French
and Spanish literature whose work was deemed most
outstanding by the Romance languages and literatures faculty.
The Joseph Italo Bosco Senior Award—awarded to a
graduating senior for excellence in Italian studies.
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college of arts and letters
SOCIOLOGY
The Margaret Eisch Memorial Prize in Sociology—
awarded to the outstanding graduating senior majoring in sociology.
The Sociology Major Essay Award—presented to the
senior sociology major who has written the best
essay.
THEOLOGY
The Gertrude Austin Marti Award in Theology—presented to a graduating senior who has evidenced
qualities of personal character and academic achievement in theological studies.
The Rev. Joseph H. Cavanaugh, CSC, Award—awarded to the senior who has evidenced high qualities
of personal character and academic achievement,
particularly in theological studies.
Service Awards
AMERICAN STUDIES
J. Sinnot Meyers Award—awarded to a senior in
American studies for outstanding service to the academic community.
ECONOMICS
Lawrence J. Lewis Award—awarded to the senior in
the Department of Economics who has best distinguished himself or herself in community service.
MUSIC
The Daniel H. Pektke Memorial Award—presented
to two underclassmen in the Notre Dame Glee Club
in recognition of musical leadership, exemplary
personal character and overall contribution to the
success of the group.
Outstanding Band Member—for loyalty, dedication,
and leadership.
Gerald J. Smith Memorial Award—awarded for citizenship and loyalty to band.
Outstanding Marching Band Award—awarded for
dedication, ability, and leadership during marching
band season.
The Kobak Memorial Scholarship—for outstanding
instrument achievement for band.
Robert F. O’Brien Award—for outstanding service
and dedication to the band.
Thomas J. Kirschner Band Treasurer Prize—annual
award to the elected band treasurer.
Band Vice President Prize—annual award to the
elected vice president of the band.
Terry Baum Secretary Prize—awarded to the secretary
of the band and presented by the University of Notre
Dame.
Halland President’s Prize—annual award for the outgoing president of the band.
specific details of a given language offering or program, check with the relevant department.
Social Chairperson Award—plaque given annually to
the social chairperson in appreciation for dedication
and service to the Notre Dame bands.
College Seminar. The College Seminar is a unique
one-semester course experience shared by all sophomores majoring in the College of Arts and Letters.
The course offers students an introduction to the diversity and distinctive focus of arts and letters at the
University of Notre Dame. Specific sections of the
College Seminar vary in their topics and texts, but
all feature an interdisciplinary approach, commitment to engaging important questions, employment
of major works, and emphasis on the development
of oral skills. Every College Seminar syllabus will
include works that approach the topic from the perspective of each of the three divisions of the college:
the arts, humanities, and social sciences.
POLITICAL SCIENCE
George Brinkley Service Award—awarded to the
student who best exemplifies the Political Science
Department’s ideal of public service through service
to the department, the University, or the wider
community.
ROMANCE LANGUAGES AND
LITERATURES
William Richardson Award in Hispanic Culture for an
African American Student—given to a graduating African American student who has shown an unusually
strong interest in Hispanic culture through his or her
active participation in campus and/or community
projects or activities.
José Tito Sigüenza Award for Service to Hispanic
Youth—awarded to the senior who has studied Spanish at Notre Dame and contributed outstanding
service to Hispanic youth.
Carlos Aballí Award in Hispanic Cultural Awareness—given to a graduating Hispanic student who
has taken Spanish at Notre Dame and has been
active in promoting Hispanic cultural awareness at
Notre Dame.
The Mara Fox Award for Service to the Hispanic
Community—awarded to a graduating senior who
has performed outstanding service benefiting the
Hispanic community.
Special Arts and Letters
Requirements
Language Requirement. Students in arts and letters
are required to reach intermediate proficiency in a
foreign language, but “intermediate proficiency” is
defined differently in each of the languages, depending on the complexity of the language itself and the
intensity of the course. Students without Advanced
Placement or SAT II credit, but who come with
some background in the language they elect will be
placed by examinations given during first-year orientation and prior to spring preregistration. Departmental placement exams will not be credit-bearing.
Students may receive up to six hours of credit based
on their scores on the AP and SAT II tests. If, for
some reason, a student receives more than six hours
of credit that appear on the transcript, the credits
beyond six will be non-counted and will be manually
subtracted from the total number of degree credits
counting for graduation. Regardless of the scores on
these exams, it is impossible for a student to test out
of the language requirement in the College of Arts
and Letters. Every student in arts and letters must
take at least one course at the appropriate level that
deals with texts in the original language. For the
For descriptions of the University and other colleges’
requirements, see “Degree Requirements” in the
front section of this Bulletin.
Arts and Letters
Programs
The programs offered by the College of Arts and
Letters include majors, supplementary majors, and
minors, which may be either departmental or interdisciplinary. The latter includes what were formerly
called concentration and area study programs. Every
student in the college must complete one major
sequence. Supplementary majors and minors are optional and may be taken to supplement or enhance a
student’s major but do not lead to graduation in and
of themselves.
Double-Counting
One course may be double-counted one time to
fulfill a second major, supplemental major, or minor
requirement and a University or college requirement.
No course may be double-counted between majors
or minors or between a major and University and
college requirements. University Seminar, by definition, fulfills a University or college requirement and
is not considered a double count under this rule.
Majors
A major sequence is a carefully chosen combination of courses from an individual department or
program that stand alone in qualifying students for
an undergraduate degree. They usually consist of
between eight and 12 courses. In contrast to the
University and college requirements that provide students with broad exposure to a variety of the liberal
arts and sciences, the major affords the student an
opportunity to gain more specialized knowledge of a
particular field or discipline.
The major in liberal arts programs is normally chosen during the sophomore year and is completed
during the junior and senior years. Each spring
before preregistration, the college holds a series of
programs and meetings to inform the students about
the various majors so that they may make intelligent
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college of arts and letters
choices. Students pursue their majors under the
direction of the departmental or program chair and
its advising staff.
Supplementary majors are those that cannot stand
alone in qualifying a student for an undergraduate
degree but must be taken in conjunction with a primary major. They include both interdisciplinary and
departmental offerings.
Arts and Letters Preprofessional Studies (ALPP)
African and African American Studies
Art History (24 hours)
Chinese (24 hours)
Classical Civilization
Computer Applications (CAPP)
Gender Studies
German (24 hours)
Greek (24 hours)
French (24 hours)
History (24 hours)
Italian (24 hours)
Japanese (24 hours)
Latin (24 hours)
Latino Studies (24 hours)
Medieval Studies (24 hours)
Philosophy (24 hours)
Russian (24 hours)
Spanish (24 hours)
Theology (25 hours)
Self-Designed Majors. A new program for a special
self-designed major was approved by the college
council during the 1994–95 year. This is a special
program for self-designed majors that will be conducted on a limited, experimental basis. While it is
not the intent to predetermine the kind and nature
of majors to be proposed, it is the expectation that
they will involve substantive integration of the subject matter in ways that cannot be undertaken within
any existing major, minor, area studies or concentration program.
The Process:
1. Interested students, in consultation with three faculty sponsors from at least two departments, should
present a detailed written proposal of their major
(which has been signed by their faculty sponsors) to
the Undergraduate Studies Advisory Committee no
later than Friday before the midsemester break of
each semester. One of the faculty sponsors should be
identified as the chair of the supervising committee.
2. Approval of the special major will be granted by
the dean, on the recommendation of the Undergraduate Studies Advisory Committee. The committee will review the proposals and communicate
their recommendations to the students before the
preregistration period begins. As it deliberates, the
committee may ask for additional information from
the student, faculty sponsors and other colleagues in
related areas to assist in further refining and rewriting the original proposal. It is the expectation that
the on-campus portions of the major will rely heavily
on existing courses.
3. Special majors must culminate in a capstone essay or where appropriate, other work, which will
be evaluated by more than one faculty member. (In
most cases, it is assumed that the faculty evaluators
will be the faculty sponsors). A detailed proposal of
the capstone project must be submitted to the faculty sponsors by November 1 of the senior year. It is
expected that a capstone essay will consist of between
30 and 50 pages (7,500–15,000 words).
4. Changes in an individual program need the approval of the chair of the supervising committee and
the dean. If students discover midstream that they
are unable to complete the special major, it may be
“dropped,” but they must then complete one of the
traditional departmental majors. Retroactive proposals will not be considered. Thus, these programs
should be well under way by the middle of the junior
year.
5. Administration of special majors will take place
through the Office of Undergraduate Studies in
a manner similar to that of the ALPP program;
i.e., students will pick up their PINs in 105
O’Shaughnessy.
6. The college council will periodically review the
special major program.
Minors
Minors are five-course sequences that can either be
departmental or interdisciplinary. The college has
three categories of minors: Departmental, Interdisciplinary, and Area Studies.
Departmental:
African and African American Studies
Anthropology
Art History
Classical Civilization
Classical Literature
East Asian Languages and Literature:
Chinese
Japanese
French and Francophone Studies
German
Greek
Italian
Latin
Music
Russian
Theology
For details, see the departmental descriptions in the
section “Programs of Study.”
Interdisciplinary:
Catholic Social Tradition
Education, Schooling, and Society
Gender Studies
Hesburgh Program in Public Service
Journalism, Ethics, and Democracy
Medieval Studies
Peace Studies
Philosophy and Literature
Philosophy, Politics, and Economics (PPE)
Philosophy Within the Catholic Tradition
Religion and Literature
Science, Technology, and Values
Area Studies:
African
Asian
European
Irish
Latin American
Mediterranean/Middle East
Russian and Eastern European
Electives
In addition to the University and college requirements and the major, the balance of a student’s usual
five-course-per-semester program consists of elective
courses, which can be drawn from the offerings of
any department or college that are open to non-majors who have met the necessary prerequisites.
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Programs of Study
American Studies
Chair:
Benedict F. Giamo
Professors:
F. Richard Ciccone (adjunct); Eugene Halton
(concurrent); Thomas J. Schlereth; Robert P.
Schmuhl; H. Ronald Weber (emeritus)
Associate Professors:
Elizabeth Christman (emerita); Walton Collins
(adjunct); Jack Colwell (adjunct); Benedict
F. Giamo; Matthew Storin (adjunct); Don
Wycliff (adjunct)
Assistant Professors:
Heidi Ardizzone; Collin Meissner
Visiting Welch Chair Professor:
Alex Kotlowitz (fall semesters only)
Professional Specialist:
Ruthann Johansen (concurrent, Arts and
Letters)
The Department of American Studies provides students with a unique opportunity to study American
culture and society in challenging and innovative
ways. Students majoring in American Studies explore
the American experience from both integrative and
disciplinary perspectives by selecting interdisciplinary
courses taught by the Department’s faculty as well as
crosslisted classes offered by Anthropology, English,
Political Science, History, and Sociology. With help
from a faculty advisor, a student plans a curriculum
of 12 courses, six from within American Studies and
six in American subjects offered in cognate departments. The interdisciplinary courses housed in the
Department of American Studies span a broad range
of academic interests: Arts and Material Culture;
Journalism and Media Studies; Literature and Society; and Social History/Movements. Courses in these
academic areas typically include an historical dimension, insights gathered from a variety of sources, perspectives drawn from traditional disciplines, and an
integrative approach that complements specialism.
Because of its breadth, the major enables students
to experience much of the richness of the College
of Arts and Letters. Internships are available which
offer practical experience in the potential career areas
of historical research, journalism, publishing, and
social service. Special features include an affiliated
interdisciplinary minor in Journalism, Ethics, and
Democracy.
The American Studies curriculum concentrates on
the writing process at all levels of instruction. For
20000-level courses, a minimum of 8–10 pages of
written work is required in addition to reader response, midterm, and final exam assignments. For
30000-level courses, a minimum of 10–12 pages is
required. For 40000-level senior academic seminars
taught by our teaching and research faculty, a minimum of 20 pages of written work (one research paper due at the end of the semester) is required; these
senior seminars will be guided by a writing-intensive
process (i.e., drafts, revisions, peer review when appropriate, and individual consultations between professors and students). Every American studies major
must take at least one 40000-level senior academic
seminar.
Course Descriptions. The following course descriptions give the number and title of each course.
Lecture hours per week, laboratory, and/or tutorial
hours per week and credits each semester are in parentheses. The instructor’s name is also included.
Beginning Courses
AMST 13101. History University Seminar
tion that depends upon the city in all its variegated
senses. Using James’s comment as a beginning this
course will examine the relationship between the development of the American city and the emergence
of a metropolitan consciousness. The course will
be thematically driven and will focus on the roles
of money, democracy, culture, and politics and will
examine how these forces coalesced through the process of urbanization and become embedded in the
distinctively modern American identity. While the
bulk of the course will deal with the late 19th and
early 20th century, we will look back to the country’s
early urban development and forward to its most
recent urban Metamorphoses.
(3-0-3)
This course provides a social and cultural history
of American domestic responses to war and threats
of war throughout the 10th century and into the
21st. Scheduled readings will include historical
scholarship, primary documents, media, and popular culture, personal narratives, and fiction. Our
discussions and writings will focus on five periods:
WWI, WWII, Cold War, Vietnam, and the Gulf
War. Issues covered include meanings of patriotism,
pacifist movements and challenges to American
military activities; perceptions of soldiers; images of
the enemy and their impact on Americans identified
with national enemies; the role of media in influencing public perception of war, and war memorials.
Throughout, we will examine not the battles and
factors that determined the military outcomes, but
the domestic struggles that have defined our national
experience.
AMST 20100. The Rise and Fall of the Modern
Racial Order: Race and Ethnicity in the
Twentieth-Century US
AMST 13120. American Culture and
Community
(3-0-3)
An introductory and interdisciplinary examination
of American political culture, particularly contemporary political thought and behavior. Although we will
trace the development of our political culture from
the nation’s beginning to the present, a principal
concern of the class will be the involvement of the
mass media in recent political history. In short, we
will attempt to come to terms with questions about
the role and influence of mass communications in
modern politics.
(3-0-3)
Freshman seminar in American culture and
community.
AMST 13186. Literature University Seminar
(3-0-3) Schmuhl
Henry James once remarked that Americans “are
the only great people of the civilized world that is
a pure democracy, and we are the only great people
that is exclusively commercial.” For James, New
York City defined the spot where everything modern
and distinctly “American,” everything about money
and about politics, everything about the individual
and about society came together as a formed, physical identity for good and bad. These tensions are
endemic to the notion of the city itself. For many,
cities such as New York and Chicago were places
to despise, places of suspicion, of immigration, of
ethnicity, places which were distinctly un-American
and that challenged America’s conception of itself
as a country founded upon and guided by rural
principles. But the democracy and commerce James
identified as specifically American is a combina-
(3-0-3)
A mixture of lecture, discussion, and in-class group
projects, this course is an introduction to the history
of race and ethnicity in the 20th-century United
States. The key questions of the course will be: How
has race, as a “social construction,” been made and
unmade over the years? That is, how have the “south
Italian race” and the “Anglo-Saxon race” come and
gone, while the “white race” and “black race” have
stayed with us? How have these groups and others
encountered the nation’s racial order over the years,
with some attempting to dismantle it to gain greater
equality (e.g. the Civil Rights Movement) and others
attempting to shore it up to protect their own privileges (e.g., the KKK and the Zoot Suit Riots)?
AMST 20101. American Political Life
AMST 20102. Visual America I: Art, History,
Culture
(3-0-3) Schlereth
A course that provides an introduction, for prospective majors and electors, to the theory and
methods of American studies scholarship by using
several types of visual culture—landscape painting,
portraiture, public sculpture, domestic architecture
and genre painting—as historical evidence. A sequel
course, Visual America II, interpreting different visual culture, will be offered in the spring semester.
The course has two basic purposes. First, to introduce students to the various methods scholars have
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developed to use visual evidence in cultural history
research; second, to provide students with a content
course in United States cultural history, one where
they receive an overview of the various roles that the
art forms noted above have played in American life,
1700–1950.
Students prepare and submit three types of written
cultural history research: (1) an historical interpretation of an American master art work; (2) a critical
review of an American art museum exhibition; (3)
an interdisciplinary, interpretative visual portfolio
analyzing a major figure, event or theme in American
visual history. Two examinations, a midterm and
a final, are also required. An online visual archive,
containing all the graphic evidence and research
methods used throughout the course will be always
accessible to students for pre-class preparations,
research and writing projects, and pre-examination
review. Fieldwork class meetings will be held at the
Native American Galley (Snite Museum), W. Washington Historical District (South Bend), and the
American Art Gallery (Snite Museum).
AMST 20103. American Men, American
Women
(3-0-3)
What does it mean to be male or female in America?
How different are our ideas about gender from those
of other cultures? This course will focus on the 20th
century and look at the origins and development of
masculine and feminine roles in the United States.
How much have they changed over time and what
aspects have been retained? We will explore the ways
that cultural images, political changes, and economic
needs have shaped the definition of acceptable behavior and life choices based on gender. Topics will
range from Victorian ideals through the Jazz Age and
war literature to movie Westerns, ‘50s television families, and ‘60s youth culture; and into recent shifts
with women’s rights, extreme sports, and talk shows.
AMST 20105. Visual America II
(3-0-3)
An introductory course, offered as a sequel to Visual
America I (AMST 20201), that will explore dimensions of several types of visual expression—popular
photography, cartography, genre and historical painting, chromolithography, the commercial and graphic
arts—in American cultural history from Louis
Daguerre’s development of photography in 1839 to
the public exhibition of television at the 1939 New
York World’s Fair.
AMST 20107. American Art: History, Identity,
Culture
(3-0-3)
Introductory and historical overview of the role that
arts—architecture, painting, and sculpture—played
in American cultural history, 1640–1940. In addition to surveying major high-style trends, attention
is given to selected regional, folk, and vernacular
artistic traditions. Basically a lecture-format course
in which students prepare two short papers, research,
and assemble a 15-page visual portfolio, and take
two exams: a midterm and a final.
AMST 20109. The Millionaire in American
Literature and Culture
(3-0-3) Meissner
Few figures in American history have so defined
the nation as the millionaire. For good or bad, the
millionaire has been an object of equally intense
scrutiny and fascination. This course will examine
the role of the millionaire in fiction by writers such
as Wharton, James, and Fitzgerald. We will also look
at the millionaire as savior and agent of corruption
in children’s literature by writers such as Margaret
Sidney and Louisa May Alcott. In looking at the millionaire historically, we will devote special attention
to the Gilded Age with its “robber barons”such as
Andrew Carnegie, Cornelius Vanderbilt, and Henry
Ford, figures whose industry and greed also fueled
the establishment of vast charitable enterprises that
helped define American culture. In politics we will
pay special attention to Theodore Roosevelt who
harbored a deep suspicion of inherited wealth and
questioned whether or not the “virtuous republic”
could sustain the presence and efforts of so many
men of “inherited wealth.” And in contemporary
society, we will try to understand how the celebrity
millionaire, i.e., Donald Trump, Paris Hilton, Ivan
Boesky, has become a celebrated cultural icon.
AMST 30100. Fundamentals of Journalism
(3-0-3)
What is news? What are the most effective ways of
presenting news to the public? What ethical decisions are involved in gathering and reporting news?
These are a few of the questions addressed in this
course.
AMST 30101. Introduction to Broadcast
Journalism
(3-0-3)
How have Americans responded at home to war and
threats of war throughout the 20th century and into
the 21st? What internal divisions and shared identities has war inspired or revealed? We will examine
not the battles and factors that determined the
military outcomes, but the domestic struggles that
have defined our national experience and informed
many of our responses to current events. Topics will
include critiques of democracy and civil rights inclusion during WWI; treatment of Japanese Americans
during WWII; development of peace movements,
and antinuclear movements; cold war politics and
fears of American communism; and debates over the
draft, just-war, racism at home, and U.S. policies
abroad in the wake of Vietnam. The final unit will
focus on the Gulf War, terrorism, and developments
since September 11, 2001.
AMST 30102. American Utopias
(3-0-3)
From our colonial roots to the present day, from the
Puritans “City Upon a Hill” to the Branch Davidians and the Waco compound, Americans have been
trying to create ideal communities based on their
particular version of the truth. In this course, we will
survey a wide variety of utopian communities, some
based on protection from the world, others based
on free love and/or perfection of human relations,
some now considered cults, and others mainstream
religions. We will examine how they were supposed
to work versus how they worked in reality, and the
dreams and beliefs upon which they were based. We
will explore the ways these experiments in living
were created by American culture and have, in turn,
transformed it.
AMST 30104. The American Scene
(3-0-3)
“To make much so much money that you won’t,
that you don’t mind, don’t mind anything that is
absolutely, I think, the main American formula. “
Henry James, The American Scene, 1907. “Greed,
for lack of a better word, is good, is right, it works,
and it will save that malfunctioning corporation
called the U.S.A.,” Gordon Gecko, Wall Street,
1987. After a 20-year absence, Henry James returns
to America to examine the country of his birth. His
tour brought him to the above quote and dismaying conclusion. This course tries to contextualize
and understand James’s remark by placing it within
a broader atmosphere of late 19th- and early 20thcentury American culture. We will look at works that
predate, are contemporary with, and follow James’s
American tour. We will look at works of literature
and biography, of politics and philosophy, and of
theology and economics. Throughout, we will keep
circling around and back to James’s notion of “The
Main American Formula” and asking not only what
exactly he meant, but how other major thinkers of
the age understood or conceived of an “American
Formula,” and how that “formula” could be measured at the level of the individual, the corporation,
the country, and, with Conrad’s Nostromo, the world.
Readings will include works of Joseph Conrad,
Theodore Dreissner, Henry Ford, Henry James,
Theodore Roosevelt, Thorstein Veblen, and Edith
Wharton. In addition, we will view several movies,
the focus of which is directly related to the course’s
central questions.
AMST 30107. World War II America: History
and Memory
(3-0-3)
Exploring a wide range of primary and secondary
sources from the 1940s and today (e.g., novels, films,
ads, posters, poetry, art, museum exhibitions, and
memorials), this course will examine the history of
America’s World War II experience and how this history is remembered and memorialized today. Areas
of study will include D-Day and Pearl Harbor; the
bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki; the Holocaust;
the emerging African-American and Mexican-American civil rights movements; the Americanization of
European immigrants; Japanese-American internment and redress; and “Rosie the Riveter” and other
women’s experiences as paid workers.
AMST 30108. American Social Movements
(3-0-3)
This interdisciplinary survey of civil rights and social
protest movements in the United States examines
suffrage inclusion, abolitionism and black civil rights
movements, labor organizing, and women’s rights
in the 19th and 20th centuries, as well as several
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contemporary protest movements. These movements
certainly question selected American ideologies, but
they also draw on American values and practices. We
will use history, film, fiction, journalism, and autobiographies to trace a tradition of protest that both
depends on and offers challenges to a democratic
society.
AMST 30109. Who is an American?
(3-0-3)
Focusing on the 20th century and examining a
wide range of material from novels and movies to
history and the law, this class charts the various
struggles to define who is an American. Who gets to
decide? What is the criteria? What difference does
the “Americanness” and “un-Americanness” make
in people’s everyday lives? To what extent and how
have these issues changed over the course of the 20th
century?
AMST 30112. Witnessing the Sixties
(3-0-3) Giamo
The purpose of this interdisciplinary course is
twofold: to examine the social context and cultural
change of the sixties, on the one hand, and on the
other to explore the various journalistic and aesthetic
representations of events, movements, and transformations. We will focus on the manner in which each
writer or artist witnessed the sixties and explore fresh
styles of writing and cultural expression, such as the
new journalism popularized by Tom Wolfe and the
music/lyrics performed by Bob Dylan. Major topics
for consideration include the counterculture and the
movement—a combination of civil rights and antiwar protest.
AMST 30113. American Identities
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course surveys the development of American
culture and society by examining constructs of identity. The course explores such questions as: What
is a nation? How is national identity determined?
What constitutes American identity, and how has
it changed over time? Who has been included and
excluded from full citizenship in the past, and why?
How do multicultural societies reconcile national
and group identities? Where is the United States
headed as a society? The course adopts historical and
sociological approaches to examine such topics as the
creation of national consciousness; Manifest Destiny
and ‘the mission of America’; sectionalism and the
Civil War; the West as a region; problems of immigration and citizenship; American identity and foreign policy; the struggle for civil rights and minority
identities in the United States; recent multiculturalism issues; “Americanization” and the globalization
of culture. Course format includes lectures, discussion, and screenings of feature and documentary film
segments. Materials cover a wide range of visual and
print media.
AMST 30115. Visual America I
(3-0-3)
The course has two objectives: First, to introduce
students to the various methods scholars have developed to use visual evidence in cultural history
research; and second, to provide students with a content course in United States history, one where they
receive an overview of the various roles that the art
forms noted above have played in 19th- and 20thcentury American life. Iconographic analysis—the
uncovering of past and present, conflicting and paradoxical layers of cultural meanings within an image
or assemblage of images—will be an important part
of the course.
AMST 30118. The Craft of Journalism
(3-0-3) Schmuhl
This class will focus on how print and broadcast
journalists work—how they think and act as well as
the dilemmas they face in delivering news, analysis,
and commentary. Several sessions will be devoted to
presentations by visiting correspondents, editors, and
producers, explaining their approaches to specific
stories and circumstances. In addition, students
will discuss the issues and questions raised in a few
books.
AMST 30119. Perspectives on Nature and
Environment in America
(3-0-3) Doppke
Throughout American history, those who took a
hand to alter nature — or raised one to preserve
it—have rarely been concerned exclusively with
the continent’s ecosystems. Rather, they saw themselves as advancing lofty ideals, such as progress or
freedom. After a general introduction to American
environmental history, this course examines how
nineteenth and twentieth century American explorers, activists and writers have understood our alterations to landscape and river, and what the stakes are
for modern environmentalists who seek to preserve
what wilderness remains.
AMST 30120. Race, Ethnicity, and Racism in
Modern American History and Culture
(3-0-3) Mason
This course will survey American attitudes, beliefs,
and practices regarding race and ethnicity from the
late 19th century to the present, including a consideration of the development and changing meaning of
the concept of “racism.” A major emphasis will be to
trace the shifting constructions of ethnicity over time
and the constantly evolving understandings of what
race entails, how racial boundaries are demarcated
and crossed, and how all these definitions are historically and culturally flexible. Another central theme
will be to trace how various European groups transformed themselves from racial-ethnic outsiders to being “white,” a process that simultaneously expanded
the bounds of inclusion for some and solidified the
terms of exclusion for others.
AMST 30121. Violence in American History
and Culture
(3-0-3) Mason
In the late 1960s, black militant H. Rap Brown
exclaimed, “Violence is as American as cherry pie.”
It might be said that the purpose of this entire course
will be to evaluate the truth of Brown’s statement.
This will be accomplished in two ways: first, by
surveying some of the major episodes and themes
of violence in American history, from its colonial
origins through contemporary issues; and second, by
assessing the meaning of that violence as it simultaneously reflects and shapes American society, culture,
and values. Our focus will be on social violence,
including riots, lynchings, revolutionary violence,
vigilantism, identity-based violence (religious/racial/
ethnic), and war. We will also consider the structures
and cultural assumptions and prejudices that lead to
these forms of physical violence.
AMST 30200. Literary Outsiders
(3-0-3)
A close study of the motif of the outsider, in his
and her various guises, primarily from literary but
also philosophical, sociological, and psychological
perspectives, with the goals of identifying what historical literary spaces outsiders inhabit and whether
these spaces are still available to literary expression in
the 21st century.
AMST 30201. American Women Writers to
1930
(3-0-3)
A close reading of “major” and “minor” American
women writers of the 18th, 19th, and early 20th
centuries.
AMST 30202. Latino Poetry
(3-0-3)
This course will focus on several prominent contemporary Latino poets whose work has enriched and
diversified the canon of American poetry in the last
20 years. Among them are such established and acclaimed authors as Gary Soto, Lorna Dee Cervantes,
Pat Mora, MartÌn Espada, and Victor Hern·ndez
Cruz. Because Latinos are not homogeneous, emphasis will be given to these poets’ diverse ethnic and
cultural origins. In this regard, one important component of the course is the various ways that Latino
poets respond to the spiritual and the sacred. Other
topics to be discussed include social justice, the family, identity (in its multiple forms), and, of course,
poetics. Readings will be assigned in individual poetry collections and in one anthology.
Assignments include group presentations, response
papers, three short academic papers, and regular attendance.
AMST 30203. The City in American Literature
(3-0-3)
Literary representations of the city and social identity
in American texts from the 1890s to the present,
including Riis, Dreiser, Wharton, Sinclair, Yezierska,
Wright, Paley, and Cisneros, as well as contemporaneous nonfiction and films.
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AMST 30204. Latin-American Images of the
US
(3-0-3)
Crosslisted with ENGL 20806.
AMST 30205. Harlem Renaissance
(3-0-3)
A study of the historical, cultural, and political
circumstances that led to the flowering of AfricanAmerican literature in the ’20s and early ’30s and
the writers it fostered: Hughes, Hurston, Toomer,
Redmon Fauset, Larson, Thurman.
AMST 30206. Icons and Action Figures in
Latino/a Literature
(3-0-3)
Understanding US Latino/Latina literature, art, and
film through its many allusions to and reinterpretations of traditional icons and historic figures as well
as legends, myths, popular figures, and action heroes/
heroines of the Americas (including those with
origins in Native American, Latino/Latina, African,
Asian, and European cultures).
AMST 30207. Readings in American Novel
(3-0-3)
Novels from Hawthorne to Morrison.
AMST 30208. American Literature: Varieties of
Religious Experience
(3-0-3)
Many American authors are skeptical toward religion, yet they are, nonetheless, preoccupied with
the religious experience. This course explores the
relationship between these attitudes in American
literature.
AMST 30209. Contemporary Short Fiction
(3-0-3)
A study of short stories and novellas written in the
last half of the 20th century.
AMST 30210. African-American Migration
Narratives
(3-0-3)
This course will explore life writings and issues of
self-representation in the African-American expressive cultural tradition in the 19th and 20th centuries.
We will pay special attention to questions of gender,
audience, authenticity, and competing feminist and
nationalist ideologies. How do we define freedom,
and what role do art and culture play? What does
it mean to be a black intellectual? Can aesthetics
stand in for activism? What does it mean to be a race
champion? Is feminism relevant for black women in
America? To what extent is self-fashioning synonymous with public responsibility? These are a few of
the questions that will drive the semester.
AMST 30211. Latino/Latina American
Literature
(3-0-3)
Studies of Latino and Latina authors, including Chicano, Caribbean, or South American.
AMST 30212. Twentieth-Century Ethnic
American Novels
(3-0-3)
In this class we will explore several ethnic American
novels by focusing on the theme of memory, specifically on the ways in which remembering one’s own
or one’s ancestors’ past becomes part of one’s selfidentification as an ethnic American. Since the ties
between past and present are rarely straightforward,
remembering one’s family history is often a painful,
haunting experience. Yet facing the ghosts of one’s
past can be a liberating process, too, allowing for
self-invention. The question of memory will also
highlight how the promises of the “American dream”
continue to be problematic for immigrants. What
does it mean to become American? Can one be fully
free in the “land of freedom”?
Readings will include: F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great
Gatsby; Anzia Yezierska, Bread Givers; James T. Farrell, Young Lonigan; John Okada, No-No Boy; Toni
Morrison, Beloved; Art Spiegelman, Maus I and Maus
II; Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior;
Louise Erdrich, Love Medicine; and Julia Alvarez,
How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents.
Requirements: Regular attendance and participation,
group presentation, several response papers, one final
(5-page) paper, and a final exam.
AMST 30213. Introduction to Post-Colonial
Literature
(3-0-3)
Traces the development of literatures from the former colonies of various empires, but principally the
British and French. An essential concern of the materials is how individual identities or (neo)national
subjectivities remain continually in a state of
formation. Major regions include Africa, India, the
Caribbean, and Southeast Asia. Authors may include
Chinua Achebe, Mariama Ba, Buchi Emecheta,
Anita Desai, Bessie Head, George Lamming, Salman
Rushdie, Wole Soyinka, Vikram Chandra, and Derek Walcott among others. Theorists include Frantz
Fanon, Edward Said, Gayatri Spivak, and Ngugi wa
Thiong’o.
AMST 30214. Early Modern American Fiction
(3-0-3)
This course explores literature written between the
Civil War and World War II. This is, of course, a dynamic century of American (not to mention world)
history; the result is an equally dynamic century of
American fiction. Our course will examine how this
fiction shows the impact of economic and technological transformations on religious beliefs, conceptions of human identity, work environments (and
men’s and women’s places in them), etc. We will not
only read several important 20th-century novels, but
will also come to a better understanding of our own
capitalist and technology-driven culture. In addition
to a few short stories and critical essays, which will
be collected in a course packet, we will read the following: Herman Melville, “Bartleby, the Scrivener”;
Theodore Dreiser, Sister Carrie; Edith Wharton,
The House of Mirth; Frank Norris, The Octopus;
Upton Sinclair, The Jungle; John Dos Passos, The
Big Money; and Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man. Course
Requirements: Several brief response papers, one
short (four- to six-page) paper, one longer (10-page)
research paper, an oral presentation, and midterm
and final exams.
AMST 30215. Border Crossings: Mexican and
Canadian Literature
(3-0-3)
Mexican and Canadian literature emphasizing cultural interaction between the US and its southern
and northern neighbors.
AMST 30216. African-American Literature
(3-0-3)
This course is designed to familiarize students with
the diverse concerns of black women’s writing from
the first novel written in 1854 through the present.
AMST 30217. Readings in Nineteenth-Century
American Literature
(3-0-3)
Long before the automobile became a symbol of
American life, travel has been a defining aspect of
many sorts of American experience. For the slave
seeking freedom, the settler in search of fertile land,
or the Native American forced from his ancestral
home, travel has necessitated fundamental transformations in the individual and the community.
Often travel and mobility are identified with the
freedom and social flexibility that historically have
distinguished the “new” world from Europe. But
travel can be punishing rather than liberating when
it is undertaken out of desperation or under force.
We will begin the course with a careful reading of
Jack Kerouac’s classic travel novel, On the Road.
Kerouac’s work develops a range of themes and
concerns that we will then trace through American
literature from the Puritans to the present. These will
include the meaning of wilderness; pilgrimage as a
search for a higher truth; the experience of freedom;
the problems of identity raised by the Confidence
Man; the relationship to the other; the search for the
father. Our readings will include Mary Rowlandson’s
captivity narrative; selections from the journals of
Lewis and Clark; Caroline Kirkland’s A New Home,
Who’ll Follow?; the autobiographies of William Apess
and Frederick Douglass; Thoreau’s Walden; Melville’s
Confidence Man; Morrison’s Beloved; and a short
story by Sherman Alexis. We will also view several
films.
Course requirements include regular attendance and
active participation, two short (five-page) papers, and
a final exam.
AMST 30218. Travel in American Literature
(3-0-3)
Long before the automobile became a symbol of
American life, travel has been a defining aspect of
many sorts of American experience. For the slave
seeking freedom, the settler in search of fertile land,
or the native American forced from his ancestral
home, travel has necessitated fundamental transformations in the individual and the community. Often
travel and mobility are identified with the freedom
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and social flexibility that historically have distinguished the “new” world from Europe. But travel can
be punishing rather than liberating when it is undertaken out of desperation or under force.
We will begin the course with a careful reading of
Jack Kerouac’s classic travel novel, On the Road.
Kerouac’s work develops a range of themes and
concerns that we will then trace through American
literature from the Puritans to the present. These will
include the meaning of wilderness; pilgrimage as a
search for a higher truth; the experience of freedom;
the problems of identity raised by the Confidence
Man; the relationship to the other; the search for the
father. Our readings will include Mary Rowlandson’s
captivity narrative; selections from the journals of
Lewis and Clark; Caroline Kirkland’s A New Home,
Who’ll Follow?; the autobiographies of William Apess
and Frederick Douglass; Thoreau’s Walden; Melville’s
Confidence Man; Morrison’s Beloved; and a short
story by Sherman Alexis. We will also view several
films.
Course requirements include regular attendance and
active participation, two short (5-page) papers, and
a final exam.
AMST 30221. Tropical Heat Waves:
Contemporary Latino/a and Caribbean
Literature
(3-0-3) Rohrleitner
A review of selected contemporary Latino/a and
Caribbean novels.
AMST 30222. Twentieth-Century American
Feminist Fiction
(3-0-3) Brogan
Close readings of major 20th-century novels, written
by both men and women, which may be accurately
described as “feminist.”
AMST 30223. Beats, Rhymes, and Life: An
Introduction to Cultural Studies
(3-0-3)
Irving An introduction to cultural studies using a
variety of media: literature, film, and music.
AMST 30300. Latino/a History
(3-0-3)
This is an interdisciplinary history course examining the Latino experience in the United States after
1848. We will examine the major demographic,
social, economic, and political trends of the past
150 years with an eye to understanding Latino/a
America. Necessarily a large portion of the subject
matter will focus on the history of Mexican-Americans, and Mexican immigrants in the Southwest, and
Midwestern United States, but we will also explore
the histories of Puerto Ricans, Cubans, and Latin
Americans within the larger Latino/a community.
Latinos are US citizens, and the course will spend
significant time on the status of these groups before
the law and their relations with the state, at the
federal, local, and community level. To explore these
issues within the various Latino communities of the
US, we will explore the following key topics: historical roots of “Latinos/as” in the US; the evolution of a
Latino/a ethnicity and identity within the US; immigration, transmigration, and the shaping of Latino/a
communities; Latino/a labor history; segregation;
civil rights; nationalism and transnationalism; the
Chicano Civil Rights Movement; Latinos in film;
and post-1965 changes in Latino/a life.
mid-19th century, including European backgrounds
and contexts. Emphasis on writings about religion,
government, natural science, education, and human
nature.
AMST 30301. Violence in US History
(3-0-3)
The course is a survey of women and religion in
America during the 19th and 20th centuries. Among
others, we will consider the following themes: how
religion shaped women’s participation in reform
movements such as abolition, temperance, and civil
rights; how religious ideology affected women’s work,
both paid and unpaid; the relationship of religion,
race, and ethnicity in women’s lives; female religious
leaders; and feminist critiques of religion. We will
examine women’s role within institutional churches
in the Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish traditions,
as well as raise broader questions about gender
and religious belief. How did religious belief affect
women both as individuals and in community? How
could religion be used to both reinforce and subvert
prevailing gender ideology? Course requirements include a midterm and final examination, several short
writing assignments, and a final paper (10–12 pages)
on a subject of the students’ choice.
(3-9-3)
In the late 1960s, black militant H. Rap Brown
exclaimed, “Violence is as American as apple pie.” It
might be said that the purpose of this entire course
will be to evaluate the truth of Brown’s statement.
This will be accomplished in two ways: first, by
surveying of some of the major episodes and themes
of violence in American history, from its colonial
origins through contemporary foreign policy and
domestic debates; and second, by assessing the meaning of that violence as it simultaneously reflects and
shapes American society, culture, and values. This
course will include significant reading and writing
components, as well as a group project.
AMST 30302. Era of US Civil War, 1848–77
(3-0-3)
In the mid-19th century, the American political
system collapsed. Divergent visions of the American
ideal plunged North and South into the bloodiest
war in the Republic’s history. This lecture course
examines the roots of the nation’s sectional division,
the disintegration of mechanisms for political compromise, the structures and policies of the wartime
Confederate and Union governments, the strategic
conduct of the armed conflict, the societies at war,
and the Union’s first hesitant steps toward reconstruction and recovery.
AMST 30303. African-American History I
(3-0-3)
This course is a survey of the history of African
Americans, beginning with an examination of their
West African origins and ending with the Civil War
era. We will discuss the 14th and 15th centuries,
West African kingdoms, forms of domestic slavery
and West African cultures, the Atlantic slave trade,
early slave societies in the Caribbean, slavery in colonial America, the beginnings of African-American
cultures in the North and South during and after the
revolutionary era, slave resistance and rebellions, the
political economy of slavery and resulting sectional
disputes, and the significance of “bloody Kansas”
and the Civil War.
AMST 30304. US Presidents: FDR to Clinton
(3-0-3) DeSantis
A study of the personalities, style, policies, and
performances of American presidents from Franklin
D. Roosevelt to Bill Clinton as they developed the
modern American presidency and made it the most
important elective office in the world.
AMST 30305. British-American Intellectual
History,1650-1900
(3-0-3)
A survey of the intellectual history of Britain and
English-speaking America from around 1600 to the
AMST 30306. Women and American
Catholicism
AMST 30307. Fashioning Identity in American
History
(3-0-3)
This course will focus on dress and material/visual
culture in colonial North America. It will introduce
methodology, and offer an overview of key themes
in the history of dress and consumerism within the
framework of gender studies. In our focus on the
colonial period (especially in the 18th century), we
will analyze the economics of dress (the production,
marketing, and acquisition of cloth and clothing)
and will assess the importance of fashion and commerce and politics. We will evaluate the role of dress
in the construction of colonial identities, and we will
examine the ways that dress operated as a visual locus
for racial, class, and ethnic encounters.
AMST 30308. Women and Religion in US
History
(3-0-3)
The course is a survey of women and religion in
America during the 19th and 20th centuries. Among
others, we will consider the following themes: how
religion shaped women’s participation in reform
movements such as abolition, temperance, and civil
rights; how religious ideology affected women’s work,
both paid and unpaid; the relationship of religion,
race, and ethnicity in women’s lives; female religious
leaders; and feminist critiques of religion. We will
examine women’s role within institutional churches
in the Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish traditions, as
well as raise broader questions about gender and religious belief. How did religious belief affect women
both as individuals and in community? How could
religion be used to both reinforce and subvert prevailing gender ideology?
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AMST 30309. US Labor History
(3-0-3) Graff
This course will examine the history of paid and
unpaid labor in the United States from colonial
times to the near present. We will seek to understand
how working people both shaped—and were shaped
by—the American Revolution, the debates over
slavery and free labor culminating in the Civil War
and Reconstruction, the rise of big business, the
creation of a national welfare state, the Cold War-era
repression of the Left, and continuing debates over
the meanings of work, citizenship, and democracy.
Throughout the course, we will devote considerable
time to the organizations workers created to advance
their own interests, namely the labor movement. We
will also pay special attention to the complicated yet
crucial connections between work and racial and
gender identities. Specific topics may include slavery,
farm labor, women’s domestic work, trade unions,
questions of industrial democracy, the role of radicalism, and the challenges confronting workers in the
current era of corporate globalization and anti-sweatshop activism.
AMST 30310. American Peace Movement
since World War II
(3-0-3)
This course examines the emergence of the modern
American peace movement between the two World
Wars and its development in the Nuclear Age since
World War II. It examines the shifting patterns of
support for the peace movement, the curious ways
Americans have searched and worked for peace, and
some of the important peace groups and leaders.
AMST 30311. Survey of African-American
History II
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): HIST 32800
This course will survey the history of African
Americans from 1865 to 1980. Specifically, this
course will focus on the problems of Reconstruction
in the South after the Civil War, the adjustments
and reactions of African Americans to freedom, the
economic exploitation of sharecropping, northern
black communities at the end of the 19th century,
the migration of black Southerners to northern urban areas, black political leadership, the Civil Rights
Movement, current examples of institutional racism,
and affirmative action in America.
AMST 30312. The United States since WWII
(3-0-3)
The purpose of this course is to study the political,
diplomatic, economic, social, and cultural development of the United States from 1945 through the
presidency of Ronald Reagan. Although the military
and diplomatic history of World War II will be
considered by way of background, the principal topics of investigation will be the Fair Deal Program of
President Truman, the Cold War, the Korean Conflict, the Eisenhower Presidency, the New Frontier,
Vietnam, President Johnson’s Great Society, the Civil
Rights Movement, the Nixon years, the social and
intellectual climate of this postwar era, and the presidencies of Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan.
AMST 30313. US Gilded Age/Progressive Era
(3-0-3)
Through discussion and lectures, students examine
the emergence of a recognizably modern United
States. Topics examined will include the emergence
of the corporation, progressive reforms, the changing
contours of American religion, the character of the
New South, the battle for women’s suffrage, developments in the arts, and American involvement in the
First World War.
AMST 30314. Media and American Culture
(3-0-3)
This course examines the myths and realities of
media in the American past and present, paying
particular attention to the ways in which old media
and new have combined to change our lives, and the
ways different groups of Americans have used various
media to make history.
AMST 30315. American Political Traditions
since 1865
(3-0-3)
Students will investigate the political debates—and
simultaneous examinations of democracy’s character—that have animated American reformers and
intellectuals since the Civil War. The focus will
be on these political traditions, not the studies of
voter behavior or policy implementation, that also
constitute an important part of political history. The
course will begin with discussion of the character of
Reconstruction, and move through the “social question” of the late 19th century, Progressive reform in
the early 20th century, the New Deal, the origins of
modern conservatism, and various post-World War
II social reform movements. Readings will include
court cases, memoirs, speeches, and a sampling of
the philosophical and historical literature.
AMST 30316. US Foreign Policy since 1945
(3-0-3)
This course covers the main developments in American foreign policy from World War II through the
Bush presidency. The principal topics of investigation will be wartime diplomacy and the origins of
the Cold War; the Cold War and containment in
Europe and Asia: Eisenhower/Dulles diplomacy;
Kennedy-Johnson and Vietnam; Nixon-Kissinger
and detente; Carter and the diplomacy of Human
Rights; Reagan and the revival of containment; Bush
and the end of the Cold War.
AMST 30317. Southern History, 1876 to the
Present
(3-0-3)
This survey relies on cultural, social, and political
analysis to develop an understanding of the region
and its identity. Circumstances and events unique to
the South will be evaluated in context of the common experiences of the United States.
AMST 30318. Race in American Culture
(3-0-3)
Although it seems counterintuitive, a person’s race
is not a biological fact, but, rather, a socially constructed idea. However, for all its genetic invisibility,
race and racial identity have produced visible consequences for people in the United States. This class
will examine why race has played such an important
role in American culture from 1877 to the present.
Throughout this class, we will examine how race and
racial identity have come to define the legal, social,
and economic status of American men and women.
The requirements for this class include a midterm,
final, and a paper.
AMST 30319. Environmental History
(3-0-3)
This course is an introduction to the new field of
environmental history. In recent decades, historians
have begun to actively explore the past sensibilities of
various groups toward the quality of their air, water,
and land; the passionate discussions of philosophers,
theologians, and social and natural scientists about
resource use, the safety of the environment, and
long-term prospects for humanity; and the customs,
laws, and managerial systems that guided use of the
environment. Historians have also increasingly paid
attention to the ways environmental factors have
affected the course of history: the effects of the distribution of water, wood, and minerals and of changes
in climate or endemic disease. This course ranges
widely in methodology from the history of ideas to
paleoclimatology, geographically from the ancient
Near East to modern America, topically from woodcutting rights in medieval France to the rise of the
organic farming movement and water-allocation laws
in the 20th-century American West.
AMST 30320. US-Native American Relations:
Revolution to Removal
(3-0-3)
Native Americans in the Eastern US remain obscure
in the historical imaginations of most Americans.
Theirs is not the story of riding horseback across
rolling plains, hunting buffalo, or shooting at John
Wayne in movies about the Old West. Neither are
the romanticized tales of suffering like in the “Trail
of Tears” their only American experience. Theirs
is rather the story of persistence through change
in their ever- shrinking, yet increasingly crowded,
woodland homes. This course is designed to expose
students to the peoples of the Trans-Appalachian
West—in particular, how they initiated, engaged,
manipulated, and/or accommodated the policies,
practices, and presence of the Euro-Americans and
US, from European Colonization to the 1840s.
AMST 30322. Colonial America
(3-0-3) Slaughter
This course considers the history of New World
exploration and settlement by Europeans from the
15th century to the 18th century. It examines the
process of colonization in a wide variety of cultural
and geographic settings. It explores the perspectives
of Indians, Europeans, and slaves with a particular
emphasis on the consequences of interracial contacts.
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We will discuss the goals and perceptions of different groups and individuals as keys to understanding
the violent conflict that became a central part of the
American experience. Lectures, class discussions,
readings, and films will address gender, racial, class,
and geographic variables in the peopling (and depeopling) of English North America.
AMST 30323. American Legal History
(3-0-3) Rodriguez
This seminar-style course deals with the interaction
between the legal system and social change in the
United States from the 1600s to the 1980s. Primary
emphasis is given to the 19th century and 20th century, two periods where American legal culture took
on much of its fundamental character and adjusted
to significant social change. Main themes include
the relationships between law and development; individual rights in the public and private spheres; the
development of the legal profession; the post-New
Deal state; and the various US “rights” movements.
Reading consists of primary sources documents and
a short survey text. Grades will be based on a series
of short papers and classroom discussion. Prior
knowledge of American history is helpful but not
required.
AMST 30324. History of the American West
(3-0-3) Coleman
Few American regions have generated as many cultural narratives, myths, and icons as the trans-Mississippi West. This course takes both the reality and
the romance of the West seriously, asking students
to examine how the American conquest of the West
inspired storytelling traditions that distorted and
shaped the region’s history. To get at this interaction,
we will read novels, histories, and first-hand accounts
as well as view several Hollywood westerns. The class
is reading and discussion intensive. Students will
write several short papers as well as a longer final
essay.
AMST 30325. US Foreign Policy to 1945
(3-0-3) Brady
This course covers the main developments in American foreign relations from the Spanish-American
War in 1898 through World War II. It traces the
emergence of the United States as a major world
power and examines in some detail how the United
States became involved in the two world wars. A
recurring theme will be the major traditions in
America foreign policy and the ways in which these
traditions influenced policy makers in the early years
of the “American Century.”
AMST 30326. US Sex/Sexuality/Gender to
1890
(3-0-3) Bederman
Sexuality, like other areas of social life, has a history.
Yet historians have only written about the history of
sex for the last 40 years or so. This course will both
introduce students to a variety of current themes in
the history of sexuality and invite them to consider
how they themselves might research and write that
history. The class will survey recent topics in the
history of sexuality from first colonial settlement to
the end of the Victorian era. Issues we may consider
include different religions’ attitudes towards sexuality (the Puritans were not anti-sex!); how different
cultures’ views of sex shaped relations between colonists and Indians; why sex was an important factor
in establishing laws about slavery in Virginia; birth
control and abortion practices; changing patterns
of courtship; men who loved men and women who
loved women; and why the average number of children in American families fell by 50 percent between
1790 and 1890. Over the course of the semester,
students will also design a small research proposal
on some aspect of the history of American sexuality
prior to 1890. Written assignments will include a
weekly journal, midterm and final examinations; a
book review; and a small research project.
AMST 30327. American Political Traditions
since 1865
(3-0-3) McGreevy
Students will investigate the political debates—and
simultaneous examinations of democracy’s character—that have animated American reformers and
intellectuals since the Civil War. The focus will be on
these political traditions, not the studies of voter behavior or policy implementation that also constitute
an important part of political history. The course will
begin with discussion of the debate over slavery and
Reconstruction, and move through the “social question” of the late 19th century, Progressive reform in
the early 20th century, the New Deal, the origins of
modern conservatism, and various post-World War
II social reform movements. Readings will include
court cases, memoirs, speeches, and a sampling of
the philosophical and historical literature.
AMST 30328. American Intellectual History I
(3-0-3) Turner
This lecture course will survey major developments
in American thought from the first English contacts with North America to the mid-19th century.
Emphasis will fall on ideas about religion, society,
politics, and natural science and on the institutions
and social contexts of intellectual life, with an eye
towards understanding the roots of our own ways of
thinking. Especially in the first weeks of the course,
European backgrounds will also receive attention.
Students will write a midterm and a final exam, as
well as a 10-page research paper.
AMST 30329. Sport in American History
(3-0-3)
Sport, a major part of American entertainment and
culture today, has roots that extend back to the colonial period. This course will provide an introduction
to the development of American sport, from the
horse-racing and games of chance in the colonial
period through to the rise of contemporary sport as
a highly-commercialized entertainment spectacle.
Using a variety of primary and secondary sources,
we will explore the ways that American sport has
influenced and been influenced by economics, politics, popular culture, and society, including issues of
race, gender and class. Given Notre Dame’s tradition
in athletics, we will explore the University’s involvement in this historical process.
AMST 30330. Morality and Social Change in
US History
(3-0-3) Abruzzo
How do we explain sweeping moral changes in
society? Why did so many people support legal slavery for so long, and what motivated others to turn
against it? What is the relationship between social
change and moral theory? The purpose of this class
is to examine the moral frameworks that Americans
have used to understand—and to change—their
society. We will focus on hotly debated issues in
American history, looking at the way that Americans
thought about issues such as slavery, animal cruelty,
sex, family roles, labor, economics, war and citizenship, and civil rights. We will look at both sides of
debates to understand the values and beliefs that
shaped traditions of social change and resistance to
that change.
AMST 30331. US Civil War and
Reconstruction, 1848–77
(3-0-3)
Arguably the study of the American Civil War is
a suitable training ground for novice historians,
for traditionally, a historian must learn to examine
events and issues from varying perspectives. Indeed,
in this course, emphasis lies not only on the events
of the period, but also on the interpretation of those
events by different interest groups. Students are
expected not only to learn the facts of the era, but
also to think about the consequences of events on
different sections and different peoples. This course
divides the period into three sections: the coming
of the Civil War, the War, and Reconstruction. A
test follows the end of each section; half of the final
exam will be on the Reconstruction section and the
rest will be comprehensive. In addition to the tests,
students will write a short paper and a short book
review.
AMST 30332. Crime, Heredity, and Insanity in
American History
(3-0-3)
The 19th century witnessed a transformation in the
understanding of the origins of criminal behavior in
the United States. For many, a religious emphasis on
humankind as sinful gave way to a belief in its inherent goodness. But if humans were naturally good,
how could their evil actions be explained? Drawing
on studies done here and abroad, American doctors,
preachers, and lawyers debated whether environment, heredity, or free will determined the actions
of the criminal. By the early 20th century, lawyers
and doctors had largely succeeded in medicalizing
criminality. Psychiatrists treated criminals as patients;
judges invoked hereditary eugenics in sentencing
criminals. Science, not sin, had apparently become
the preferred mode of explanation for the origins of
crime. But was this a better explanation than what
had come before? Discussion will be the primary
form of instruction.
AMST 30400. Presidential Leadership
(3-0-3)
This course examines the role of the presidency
in the American regime and its change over time.
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Particular attention will be given to expectations
about presidential leadership through the course of
American political history. Beginning with questions
about the original design and role of the presidency,
the course turns to consideration of the role of leadership styles for change and continuity in American
politics. Finally, cases of presidential leadership are
studied to comprehend the way leadership and political context interact.
AMST 30401. American Congress
(3-0-3)
This class will expose the student to the practical
workings of the US Congress, some major theories
attempting to explain those workings, and some of
the methods and materials needed to do research on
Congress. It will place the study of Congress in the
context of democratic theory, and in particular the
problem of the way in which the institution across
time grapples with the problem of the common
good.
AMST 30402. Race/Ethnicity and American
Politics
(3-0-3)
This course introduces students to the dynamics of
the social and historical construction of race and ethnicity in American political life. The course explores
the following core questions: What are race and
ethnicity? What are the best ways to think about the
impact of race and ethnicity on American citizens?
What is the history of racial and ethnic formation in
American political life? How do race and ethnicity
link up with other identities animating political actions like gender and class? What role do American
political institutions—the Congress, presidency,
judiciary, state and local governments, etc.—play in
constructing and maintaining these identity categories? Can these institutions ever be used to overcome
the points of division in American society?
AMST 30403. Constitutional Interpretation
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Americans have always debated Supreme Court
opinions on specific constitutional questions involving the powers of government and the rights of individuals and minorities. The leading objective of this
course is to acquaint students with the basic issues of
constitutional interpretation and to show how they
influence questions involving constitutional rights
and powers and the scope of judicial review.
AMST 30404. Race/Ethnicity and American
Politics
(3-0-3)
This course introduces students to the dynamics of
the social and historical construction of race and ethnicity in American political life. The course explores
the following core questions: What are race and
ethnicity? What are the best ways to think about the
impact of race and ethnicity on American citizens?
What is the history of racial and ethnic formation in
American political life? How do race and ethnicity
link up with other identities animating political actions like gender and class? What role do American
political institutions—the Congress, presidency,
judiciary, state and local governments, etc.—play in
constructing and maintaining these identity categories? Can these institutions ever be used to overcome
the points of division in American society?
AMST 30405. American Voting and Elections
(3-0-3)
This course will examine voting and opinions, and
the linkage between political leaders and the mass
public. Possible topics include an introduction to
electoral analysis; the history of recent electoral politics; the nature of political participation, especially
the rationality of voting turnout and non-electoral
specialization; party identification and opinions,
attitudes and ideology; social groups and cultural
identities; mass media and image campaigns; and
differences between presidential and congressional
elections.
AMST 30406. Introduction to Public Policy
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
The objective of this course is to introduce students to the process of public policy formation in
American politics. The course will be divided into
three parts. The first section will encompass a brief
review of some of the more important mechanisms
of American politics that affect the legislative process
(political participation, interest groups, congressional
elections, etc.). We will then engage in a general review of how such factors have affected the direction
and tone of federal public policy over the past 30
years. The final two sections of the course will be devoted to detailed analysis of two public policy areas
of particular interest to younger voters: education reform and drug laws. Building on the earlier readings
and the analytical tools developed, we will examine
the current debates and prospects for reform in these
policy areas, with an eye toward understanding the
political realities of public policy formation.
AMST 30407. Political Participation
(3-0-3)
This course is intended to explore some of the causes
of citizens’ differentiated rates of political participation in American politics, as well as the impact that
this has on the representational relationship between
constituents and legislators. We will begin with a
theoretical overview of some of the unique aspects
of our representational system. Next, we will analyze
the factors that influence the formation of individuals’ political preferences, and their propensity to undertake various forms of political participation. Then
we will turn to an analysis of the formation and uses
of public opinion. Finally, the class will investigate
the consequences of using institutional reforms
geared toward “direct democracy” to increase political participation and/or the weight of public opinion
on the legislative process.
AMST 30408. Race/Ethnicity and American
Politics
(3-0-3)
This course introduces students to the dynamics of
the social and historical construction of race and ethnicity in American political life. The course explores
the following core questions: What are race and
ethnicity? What are the best ways to think about the
impact of race and ethnicity on American citizens?
What is the history of racial and ethnic formation in
American political life? How do race and ethnicity
link up with other identities like gender and class
animating political actions? What role do American
political institutions—the Congress, presidency,
judiciary, state and local governments, etc.—play in
constructing and maintaining these identity categories? Can these institutions ever be used to overcome
the points of division in American society?
AMST 30409. Latin American International
Relations
(3-0-3) Hagopian
This course examines the international relations of
Latin America with an emphasis on what determines
US policy toward Latin America, and the policies
of Latin American states toward the United States,
other regions of the world, and each other. It analyzes recurring themes in US.-Latin American relations, including the response of the United States to
dictatorships, expropriations of US-owned property,
and revolution. It also studies new directions and
issues in Latin America’s international relations, e.g.,
trade policy, the environment, migration, and drugs
in a post-Cold War world.
AMST 30410. American Political Thought
(3-0-3)
This course will examine different ideas, approaches,
and issues within feminist political thought. The first
part of the course will compare different theoretical
perspectives, from liberalism to Marxism, that have
been employed by contemporary feminists. The
course will pay particular attention to the meanings
ascribed to “woman” and her roles in society. The
second part of the course will examine how women
have been represented throughout Western political
thought, and the values ascribed to them by political
theorists. Finally, in the last part of the course, we
will turn to an examination of several contemporary political issues particularly relevant to feminist
thought.
AMST 30412. Race/Ethnicity and American
Politics
(3-0-3)
This course examines the role that race and ethnicity
play in American political life. Among the key questions it seeks to address are: What are the origins of
racial and ethnic categories (white, Irish American,
African American, Latino, Asian, etc.)? What role
have political institutions and group behavior played
in effecting the transformation and sometimes
destruction of racial categories? What role do patterns of racial and ethnic formation (the values that
we attach to certain identities) play in structuring
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American politics? What role do race and ethnicity
play in the generation of public policies in America?
Is an America where race is irrelevant possible?
the major issues, questions, and themes considered
throughout the semester are “revisited” and reconsidered.
AMST 30413. Presidential Leadership
AMST 30416. Constitutional Law
(3-0-3)
This course examines the role of the presidency
in the American regime and its change over time.
Particular attention will be given to expectations
about presidential leadership through the course of
American political history. Beginning with questions
about the original design and role of the presidency,
the course turns to consideration of the role of leadership styles for change and continuity in American
politics. Finally, cases of presidential leadership are
studied to comprehend the way leadership and political context interact.
AMST 30414. Religion and Politics
(3-0-3)
Voters hear increasing amounts of religious discourse
in American political campaigns and administrations are turning to religious institutions for social
service delivery. The linkages between religion and
politics, however, are very complex and constitutionally delicate. This course utilizes a burgeoning body
of empirical studies, drawn from political science,
sociology, and psychology, that address relationships
among religious beliefs and organizations on the
one hand, and political attitudes and actions, on the
other. Topics include the meaning and measurement
of religiosity; linkages between religion and politics
at the level of the individual, the local community of
faith, and the policy maker; foundational beliefs, images of God, conceptions of human nature, and their
consequences for the political order; religious values
embedded in the American political system; religion
and the state, as seen in selected court cases; and
denominational bodies, interest groups, and religious
movements in American politics. Students will be
responsible for one or two exams, oral presentations,
and an original research paper. Depending on class
size, either a lecture-discussion or a seminar-tutorial
mode of teaching will be used. Students will read
books by Wald, Benson and Williams, and several
other authors, and may do directed research on NES
or GSS datasets. (Also open to graduate students.)
AMST 30415. Latino Politics
(3-0-3)
This course provides a careful and “critical” analysis
of the political status, conditions, and the political
activities of the major Latino (or “Hispanic”) groups
in the United States—Mexican Americans, Puerto
Ricans, and Cuban Americans. To provide a context
and grounding, various theoretical perspectives are
first considered, followed by discussions of the historical experiences and contemporary socioeconomic
situations of the several Latino groups. Attention
then turns to a number of issues concerning political attitudes, behaviors, and activities. Assessments
of Latino influence upon the major local, state, and
national institutions of the political system, and vice
versa, are then considered. Policy areas particularly
significant for Latinos are also examined. Finally,
(3-0-3)
This course examines the main principles of American Constitutional Law, the process of constitutional
interpretation, and the role of the Supreme Court
in the American political system. Topics covered are
presidential war powers and impeachment, congressional-executive relations, free speech, church-state
relations, the right to life (abortion, right to die,
and death penalty), race and gender discrimination, taxing and spending power of the national
government, and the American federal system. A
great deal of attention will be given to the evolving
constitutional policies of the Rehnquist court and
the “great debate” currently taking place, inside and
outside the judiciary, over the interpretation of our
written constitution. Required text is Kommers and
Finn, American Constitutional Law; Essays, Cases, and
Comparative Notes (Boston: West-Wadsworth, 1998).
This course is a University elective. Requirements
are a midterm and final examination and possibly,
depending on enrollment, a short paper.
AMST 30417. American Political Thought
(3-0-3)
This course examines the ideas that form the
foundations of American politics. We will read the
Declaration of Independence, selected Federalist and
Anti-Federalist writings, Tocqueville’s Democracy in
America, and the Lincoln-Douglas debates with the
goal of exploring and assessing competing definitions
of liberty, democracy, and human nature within the
American tradition. Requirements include four short
papers, class participation, and a final exam. This
course assumes you are familiar with the structure of
American government and the basic history of the
period. If you have background in political theory,
you should find it useful.
AMST 30418. Introduction to Public Policy
(3-0-3) Ayala
The objective of this course is to introduce students to the process of public policy formation in
American politics. The course will be divided into
three parts. The first section will encompass a brief
review of some of the more important mechanisms
of American politics that impact on the legislative
process (i.e., political participation, interest groups,
congressional elections, etc.). We will then engage
in a general review how such factors have impacted
the direction and tone of federal public policy over
the last 30 years. The final two sections of the course
will be devoted to detailed analysis of two public
policy areas of particular interest to younger voters,
education reform and drug laws. Building on the
earlier readings and the analytical tools developed,
we will examine the current debates and prospects
for reform in these policy areas, with an eye towards
understanding the political realities of public policy
formation.
AMST 30500. Race and Ethnicity in America
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on race and ethnic relations in
the United States. Current cases involving racial and
ethnic issues will be presented and discussed in class.
Readings and materials will present three approaches
to the study of majority-minority group relations,
the emergence and maintenance of group dominance, and minority-group adaptations to modes of
dominance, including separation, accommodation,
acculturation, and assimilation. Class participation
and students’ experiences will be emphasized.
AMST 30501. Social Movements
(3-0-3) Summers-Effler
How is social change possible? This is one of the
central questions for the study of social movements,
as well as the organizing theme of this course. In this
course we will consider the ways in which difference
sociological theories of social movements have asked
and answered this question, paying particular attention to theories of identity, emotion, and networks.
AMST 30502. Catholicism in Contemporary
America
(3-0-3)
This course offers a sociological overview of the
Roman Catholic Church in the United States since
World War II. Recent trends will be examined at the
societal, organization, and individual levels of analysis. Topics include: the involvement of the Church in
public life, the causes and consequences of the priest
shortage, and increasing individualism and personalism among lay Catholics.
AMST 30503. Social Deviance
(3-0-3)
In this course, students will discuss deviant people
and activities with special attention paid to the process whereby deviance is defined. Discussions will
focus on issues of social power, moral entrepreneurship, and human variation.
AMST 30504. Poverty, Inequality, and Social
Stratification
(3-0-3)
Social inequality is a prominent and persistent feature of modern society. Social stratification theory
attempts to explain the causes of inequality and the
reasons for its persistence. This course will address
such questions as: Why are some people rich and
some people poor? Why does inequality persist?
Who gets ahead? Can men and women get the same
jobs? Do different races have the same opportunities? Is inequality necessary? Potential topics include
inner-city and rural poverty, welfare dependency,
homelessness, status attainment and occupational
mobility, racial and ethnic stratification, gender
stratification, and class theory.
AMST 30506. Criminology
(3-0-3) Welch
This course will introduce you to theoretical interpretations of criminal behavior, empirical research
on crime in diverse contexts, and policy debates
on crime control and punishment. Our intent will
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be to raise critical questions and to challenge commonly—held views about the nature of crime and
punishment in the United States today. As students
of sociology, we will operate under the assumption
that crime and punishment are social phenomena;
they can only be understood by analyzing their
relationship to the broader social, political, and cultural context in which they exist. With a particular
emphasis on race, class, and gender, we will explore
crime and practices of punishment in three social
contexts: “the street,” paid work settings, and intimate and family relations. Cannot take if previously
taken SOC 43752; content overlap.
AMST 30600. Prehistory of Western North
America
(3-0-3)
Archaeological data and cultural life of prehistoric
Western North America over the last 20,000 years
will be covered. This course emphasizes origins and
cultural development from an early pioneer stage
to the later, sophisticated, diverse cultures of Native
Americans.
AMST 30601. Prehistory of Western North
America
(3-0-3)
Tremendous variation exists between the cultures of
the peoples of North America. This course will offer an opportunity to glimpse this variation, which
occurs in technology, social organization, economic,
political, and religious systems, and in the arts.
A brief introduction of the archaeological and
linguistic evidence will provide information on the
debate as to when and by what means people entered America and spread throughout its vast area.
The course will then move on to consider the many
different cultural adaptations to the various environments of North America. The comparative approach
will be used to discuss the similarities and differences
between specific cultures. The readings will focus
upon particular groups (i.e., Eskimo, Cahuilla, Dakota, Navajo, etc.).
The course will also be concerned with the cultural
changes that occurred within Native American cultures during the colonial and expansion periods of
Euro-American cultures. The course will end with
consideration of the current issues significant to
Native-American cultures.
Lectures, film, discussions of readings, and research
will allow students a range of learning experiences.
Both exams and short papers, as well as a research
paper provide students with an opportunity to demonstrate their understanding of the basic information
and issues.
AMST 30602. American Social Movements
(3-0-3)
This interdisciplinary survey of civil rights and social
protest movements in the United States examines
suffrage inclusion, abolitionism and black civil rights
movements, labor organizing, and women’s rights
in the 19th and 20th centuries, as well as several
contemporary protest movements. These movements
certainly question selected American ideologies, but
they also draw on American values and practices. We
will use history, film, fiction, journalism, and autobiographies to trace a tradition of protest that both
depends on and offers challenges to a democratic
society.
and commentary. Several sessions will be devoted to
presentations by visiting correspondents, editors, and
producers, explaining their approaches to specific
stories and circumstances. In addition, students
will discuss the issues and questions raised in a few
books.
AMST 30606. Prehistory of the American
Southwest
AMST 40108. Media Criticism
(3-0-3)
This course uses archaeological data and theory to
explore the cultural life of prehistoric Southwest
Americans over the last 12,000 years. The course
emphasizes origins and cultural development from
an early pioneer stage to the later, sophisticated and
diverse cultures of the American Southwest. The
descendants of these cultures include the Pueblo
peoples, the Dene, and the O’odham peoples. In the
course students will explore cultural change, land-use
patterns, economics, and political complexity, using
information on environmental relationships, technology, and other aspects of material culture.
(3-0-3)
This course will explore the work of such seminal
American media critics as A.J. Liebling and Walter
Lippmann, as well as the plethora of contemporary
critics in newspapers, magazines, television, and
Web publications. It will examine the philosophical
principles against which journalism in the American
democracy ought to be measured. It also will explore
the phenomenon of the ombudsman, or reader
representative, in modern American media, with a
particular focus on whether ombudsmen have been
able to build or buttress the credibility of news organizations. And it will challenge students to write on a
regular basis their own media criticism.
AMST 30607. Native Peoples of North America
AMST 40200. African-American Literature
(3-0-3) Mack
Tremendous variation exists between the cultures
of the peoples of North America, both in the past
and today. This course will offer an opportunity to
glimpse at this variation, which occurs in technology, social organization, economic, political, and
religious systems, and in the arts. A brief introduction of the archaeological and linguistic evidence will
provide information on the debate as to when and
by what means people entered America and spread
throughout its vast area. The course will then move
on to consider the many different cultural adaptations to the various environments of North America.
The comparative approach will be used to discuss
the similarities and differences between specific
cultures. The readings will focus upon particular
groups (i.e., Eskimo, Cahuilla, Dakota, Navajo, etc.).
The course will also be concerned with the cultural
changes which occurred within Native American
cultures during the Colonial and Expansion periods
of Euro-American cultures. The course will end with
consideration of the current issues significant to Native American cultures. Lectures, films, discussions of
readings, and research will allow students a range of
learning experiences. Both exams and short papers,
as well as a research paper provide students with an
opportunity to demonstrate their understanding of
the basic information and issues.
AMST 40100. Writing Nonfiction
(5-0-3) Temple
The techniques of nonfiction writing from the basic
journalistic news story to the magazine feature to the
personal essay. Students will complete a wide range
of assignments and also discuss examples of various
kinds of nonfiction prose.
AMST 40105. The Craft of Journalism
(3-0-3)
This class will focus on how print and broadcast
journalists work-how they think and act as well as
the dilemmas they face in delivering news, analysis,
(3-0-3) Wilson
A historical and thematic account of the rise and
achievement of African-American authors over several centuries.
AMST 40201. American War Literature
(3-0-3)
American War Literature is multifaceted, highly
charged with personal agonies and national interrogations. Viewed as a broad field, these texts offer
opportunities for diverse research into national
ideology, the views and interpretations of the enemy,
the accounts of interior conflicts, and the historical
moments that shape these tales. How should we read
works that contemplate collective and individual violence? What kinds of analysis and historical recovery
bring us to points of understanding and meaning?
Our panoramic explorations will include the canonically familiar such as Mary Rowlandson’s captivity
narrative; the Civil War poetry of Whitman and
Melville,The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane,
the more recent such as Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-Five, and Tim O’Brien’s The Things They
Carried; and the ongoing such as writings from the
wars in Iraq. Our texts will serve as entry points for
aesthetic, historical, and theoretical studies aimed at
illuminating the functions and values of war writing
in the United States. This course will require several
short papers, a long final essay, and active student
participation.
AMST 40202. Crossing Color Lines
(3-0-3)
This class will explore the conflicted and contradictory ways in which racial and ethnic identities have
been constructed and mediated in American culture.
We will specifically focus on what the psychology
and performance of “Passing” reveal about the limitations and possibilities of what we often generically
understand as “American” identity. We will thus be
able to question essentialist notions of “whiteness”
and “race,” and raise questions such as: Who gets
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to be American? Who doesn’t? How does popular
culture construct and perpetuate racist stereotypes,
and how can it at other moments resist, critique, and
deconstruct such practices? Readings may include
The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man (James Weldon Johnson), The Great Gatsby (F. Scott Fitzgerald),
Passing (Nella Larsen), Absalom, Absalom! (William
Faulkner), George Washington Gomez (Americo
Paredes), Black Like Me (John Griffin), and Caucasia
(Danzy Senna). Films may include: The Jazz Singer,
Six Degrees of Separation , Imitation of Life, and Bamboozled. Requirements: active participation, group
presentation, short paper (five to six pages), final
exam, and final research paper (10 pages).
AMST 40203. African-American Poetry and
Poetics
(3-0-3)
An examination of poetry and poetics by black
Americans from the beginnings to the present. Formal attention concerning the aesthetics of poetry are
considered within their historical and intellectual
contexts. Poets include Phillis Wheatley, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Claude McKay, Langston Hughes,
Robert Hayden, Gwendolyn Brooks, LeRoi Jones,
Audre Lorde, Michael Harper, Yusef Komunyakaa,
and Rita Dove.
AMST 40204. Mark Twain
(3-0-3)
A study of Twain’s life and writings in light of the
history of ideas and the literary, political. philosophical, and religious currents of 19th-century American
culture. We will also consider such figures as Harte,
Stowe, Douglass, and Lincoln, who illuminate
Twain’s style and social and moral preoccupations as
well as compelling questions centering on the nature
of an American identity. Special concerns: Twain’s
place in the tensions between conventional literary
forms and the emerging American vernacular; his
vision and critique of American democracy, slavery,
“exceptionalism,” and later geopolitical expansionism; his medievalism, including Joan of Arc, and
larger interpretations of history; his treatment of
women, individualism, and the family; and the later
gnosticism of #44, The Mysterious Stranger. We will
also address the current (and perennial) discussions
of unity and pluralism in American culture, as in
Garry Wills’s delineation of an underlying American
identity in Under God and Arthur Schlesinger Jr. ‘s
fear of “balkanization” in The Disuniting of America.
Readings: selected shorter works, including Diary of
Adam and Eve; Innocents Abroad; Life on the Mississippi; Tom Sawyer; Huckleberry Finn; A Connecticut
Yankee; Pudd’nhead Wilson; #44,The Mysterious
Stranger; and selections from the autobiography.
AMST 40205. American Film
(3-0-3) Krier
Presentations and discussions of the several genres of
film produced in America since the early 1900s.
AMST 40206. Constituting Americans
(3-0-3)
This course will explore life writings and issues of
self-representation in the African-American expressive cultural tradition from 1850 to 1905. This
course is concerned with the concept of citizenship,
its implied universalism, and the necessity of critiquing this universalism that maintains a unified notion
of democracy.
AMST 40207. The City in American Literature
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the connections between literary
representations of the city and social identity in a
variety of American literary texts from the 1890s to
the present.
AMST 40208. Mark Twain
(3-0-3) \Werge
A study of Twain’s life and writings in light of the
history of ideas and the literary, political. philosophical, and religious currents of 19th-century American
culture. We will also consider such figures as Harte,
Stowe, Douglass, and Lincoln, who illuminate
Twain’s style and social and moral preoccupations as
well as compelling questions centering on the nature
of an American identity. Special concerns: Twain’s
place in the tensions between conventional literary
forms and the emerging American vernacular; his
vision and critique of American democracy, slavery,
“exceptionalism,” and later geopolitical expansionism; his medievalism, including Joan of Arc, and
larger interpretations of history; his treatment of
women, individualism, and the family; and the later
gnosticism of #44, The Mysterious Stranger. We will
also address the current (and perennial) discussions
of unity and pluralism in American culture, as in
Garry Wills’s delineation of an underlying American
identity in Under God and Arthur Schlesinger Jr. ‘s
fear of “balkanization” in The Disuniting of America.
Readings: selected shorter works, including Diary of
Adam and Eve; Innocents Abroad; Life on the Mississippi; Tom Sawyer; Huckleberry Finn; A Connecticut
Yankee; Pudd’nhead Wilson; #44,The Mysterious
Stranger; and selections from the autobiography.
AMST 40209. Our America/African-American
Literature
(3-0-3)
This course is interested in the shaping of national
identity and the historical, cultural, and moral assumptions about America that facilitate such a shaping. How does one become American? We will read
20th-century African-American literature with focus
on how “black subjectivity” is created. How does an
author’s literary imagination construct a character
and hail a reader? We will explore the relationship
between literature, history, and cultural mythology;
the American obsession with race; sexual ideology
and competing representations of domesticity. In
light of the way blackness is often construed as the
ultimate sign of race in America, how do these texts
approach the American political landscape to offer a
critique of power, identity, and social subjectivity in
a manner that interrogates whiteness and its ascribed
universality?
AMST 40210. Native American Literature
(3-0-3)
This course serves as an introductory exploration
of the literatures written by Native- American
authors—oral literatures, transitional literatures (a
combination of oral and written expression), and
contemporary poetry and prose.
AMST 40211. American Fiction
(3-0-3)
A close examination of major mid-20th-century
American novelists.
AMST 40212. Our America/African-American
Literature
(3-0-3)
I will tell you something about stories,
[he said]
They aren’t just entertainment.
Don’t be fooled.
They are all we have, you see,
all we have to fight off
illness and death.
You don’t have anything
if you don’t have the stories.
Their evil is mighty
but it can’t stand up to our stories.
So they try to destroy the stories
let the stories be confused or forgotten.
They would like that
They would be happy
Because we would be defenseless then.
——-Leslie Marmon Silko, Ceremony (2).
Autobiography and biography are modes of narrative
discourse, and certain marginalized groups—women
and people of color—use narratives to define questions of identity, to question power relations, to
explore their own voices as writers and as learners
in hegemonic institutions, like schools. And while
we might critique these narratives for their “locality”—that is, these narratives are often critiqued on
the basis of telling a story about an individual at a
specific point in history, saying little about their ability to tell a “total story”—as the epigraph opening
this description suggests, stories are much more and
are sometimes “all we have” to face a world that is
hostile, painful and unjust In other words, individual
stories do often reflect the socio-political contexts
from which they emerge.
In this course we will explore the tensions raised
above by examining the ways in which narratives/
stories, specifically autobiographical and biographical
ones, tell an individual as well as a total story. What
do the Latino/a writers say about their own identities
and cultures as Chicanos/Mexicanos, as Cubanos,
Puertoriquenos, and as women? How and in what
ways are ethnic identities within a Latino Diaspora
constructed, and what issues cut across ethnic and
racial lines? How do Latinos construct race/ethnicity
vis-a-vis whiteness? In other words, how do we frame
ourselves and how are we framed in relation to the
dominant constructions of race in this country?
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AMST 40213. Nature in American Literature
(3-0-3)
This course examines the central and changing role
of nature in American literature, from the typological eschatology of the Puritans to the pop-culture
apocalypticism of Don DeLillo’s White Noise.
AMST 40214. Voices of American
Renaissance
(3-0-3)
Requirements include active class participation (25
percent); one short (five-page) essay (15 percent) and
two longer (eight- to 10-page) essays (20 percent
each); and a final exam (20 percent).
The human voice manifested tremendous cultural,
spiritual, and political power for antebellum Americans. Vox populi, vox dei (“The voice of the people is
the voice of God”) proclaimed the popular political
slogan. Transcendentalist writers such as Emerson
considered the written word to be merely the dead
letter of inspired speech. Vernacular literatures, Native American and African American oral traditions,
and sacred and political oratory all contributed distinctive models of voice to the antebellum babel.
In this course, we will focus on the trope of voice
as it shaped the literatures of the American Renaissance period and explore the cluster of meanings
that antebellum Americans attached to it. Our readings will include works by Emerson, Thoreau, Poe,
Dickinson, Whitman, Douglass, Melville, Stowe,
Hawthorne, and a number of lesser known authors
and oral performers.
Requirements include active class participation (25
percent); one short (5-page) essay (15 percent) and
two longer (8–10 page) essays (20 percent each); and
a final exam (20 percent).
AMST 40215. Realism and Naturalism in
American Literature
(3-0-3)
This course will consider American literature between the Civil War and World War I in relation
to the literary movements known as realism and
naturalism. We will start out by making an effort
to define these terms, looking at the statements of
writers and critics from those years as well as recent
critical and theoretical essays on realism and naturalism. We will then read a wide range of texts from
the period, discussing their relations to these literary
movements. We will ask questions such as: What
distinguishes novels usually referred to as realist, such
as Henry James’s Portrait of a Lady, from those seen
as naturalist, such as Frank Norris’s McTeague? Is it
useful to apply the concepts of realism and naturalism to the 1890s explosion of writings by black
women like Frances Harper (Lola Leroy) and Pauline
Hopkins (Contending Forces)? How were new forms
of nonfiction writing about social problems—books
like Jacob Riis’s How the Other Half Lives, Jane Addams’s Twenty Years at Hull House, W.E.B. DuBois’s
The Souls of Black Folk, and Thorstein Veblen’s
Theory of the Leisure Class—related to realist novels
dealing with similar issues, such as Stephen Crane’s
Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, Charles Chesnutt’s The
Marrow of Tradition, Theodore Dreiser’s Sister Carrie,
James Weldon Johnson’s Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man, and Edith Wharton’s The House of Mirth?
Does the “reality” or “nature” represented in realism
and naturalism look different depending on the
perspective of writers who differ along lines of race,
gender, ethnicity, and class, as well as in other ways?
Evaluation will be based heavily on class participation in discussions of these and other questions, but
also on short papers engaging with the critical essays
that will supplement our literary readings, as well as
on a final essay due at the end of the term.
AMST 40216. African-American Women
(3-0-3)
At the end of the millennium, at a time of great
anxiety for at least a portion of our society, we have
also witnessed a great explosion of African-American
women writers. This course will seek to understand
the relation of these women to the larger American
culture and what they have to say about our collective vision and future. At the same time, we will
engage in an in-depth study of two of our most
prominent writers within this group-specifically Alice Walker and Toni Morrison. The purpose here will
be to understand individual works and the individual
authors, as well as the significant ways these writers
both converge and diverge. Finally, we will place
these writers in the context of both poetry and essays
by other African-American writers, particularly Audre Lorde and June Jordan.
AMST 40219. Writing Harlem: Race,
Renaissance, and the Modern
(5-0-3) Johnson-Roullier
A study of the historical, cultural, and political
circumstances that led to the flowering of AfricanAmerican literature in Harlem in the 1920s and
1930s.
AMST 40221. Great American Novels
(3-0-3)Lee
Close readings of selected classic American novels.
AMST 40222. Class, Labor, and Narrative
(3-0-3) Sayers
This course explores the works of selected American
writers addressing class and labor.
AMST 40223. American War Literature
(3-0-3)
Beginning with Mary Rowlandson’s captivity narrative and ending with Tim O’Brien’s The Things They
Carried, an exploration of the aesthetic, historical,
and theoretical functions and values of war writing
in the United States.
AMST 40224. Tragedy: Shakespeare and
Melville
(3-0-3) Staud
Using concepts of tragedy as a linking principle, this
course reads several Shakespearean plays and then
Moby-Dick, noting Shakespeare’s influence on the
American novelist.
AMST 40225. Our America: Exploring the
Hyphen between African and American
(3-0-3) Irving
Close readings of various 20th-century AfricanAmerican literatures, with foci on how “black subjectivity” is created; the relationship between literature,
history, and cultural mythology; the dialectic of freedom and slavery in American rhetoric; the American
obsession with race; and the sexual ideology and
competing representations of domesticity.
AMST 40300. American Thought, Belief, and
Values since 1865
(3-0-3)
A study of Americans’ most characteristic American
intellectual, moral, and religious beliefs, especially as
expressed by leading thinkers, and of why these beliefs have flourished in the American cultural setting.
Topics will include questions such as the competing
authorities of faith and science, the search for truth
in a pluralistic society, professional and popular
philosophies including pragmatism and post-modernism, moral authority in democratic culture,
social science and law, the relation of individuals
to communities, the relation of American materialism to American beliefs, the outlooks of diverse
sub-cultures, African-American outlooks, feminist
perspectives, competing religious and secular faiths,
and roles of various forms of Christianity and other
religious beliefs in American life.
AMST 40301. Women and Work in Early
America
(3-0-3)
This course will introduce students to a broad view
of early American social history that foregrounds the
gendered aspects of work in Early America-defined
loosely as the period from colonial settlement to
1820. On one level, this approach allows for the recovery of women and girls’ contributions to the formal and informal economies of pre-Industrial early
America, including their work activities within the
household. This perspective is especially crucial to
the examination of white, Native American, and African servitude and/or slavery since gender ideologies
dictated the work experiences of large race— and
class—defined segments of the population. Yet cultural retention also played a part and this course will
invite students to investigate the impact of derivative work practices (for example, examining African
women’s dominance of market activities in the
New World through the lens of West-African work
practices). Further, while the course title emphasizes
women’s experiences, the class and race implications of male work practices in early America will be
similarly illuminated by a gender studies approach.
Thus, an overarching purpose of the course will be to
highlight the fluid and instable conceptions of work
that were applied alternately to masculine as opposed
to feminine occupations, just as they were alternately
applied to European versus non-European, free versus enslaved, and public versus private spheres.
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AMST 40302. United States 1900–45
(3-0-3) Blantz
The purpose of this course is to study the political,
diplomatic, economic, social, and cultural development of the United States from 1900 to 1945.
The principal topics to be investigated will be the
Progressive Period legislation of Presidents Theodore
Roosevelt, William Taft, and Woodrow Wilson, the
causes and effects of World War I, the cultural developments of the 1920s, the causes of the Wall Street
Crash and Great Depression, the New Deal legislation of President Franklin Roosevelt, the diplomacy
of the interwar period, and the home front during
World War II.
AMST 40303. Women in the US South
(3-0-3)
This course introduces students to the historical
study of women in the United States South. It will
cover topics such as women in slavery, the transition freedom, race relations, and social movements.
Through student-centered discussions, presentations,
and a variety of different writing assignments, students will analyze how race, class, and gender structured the experiences of women in southern society.
At the end of the semester students will be prepared
to pursue more advanced research in the field of
Women’s history. All are welcome.
AMST 40304. Labor Movements in TwentiethCentury US
(3-0-3)
This course explores American workers’ collective efforts as workers in their search for economic security,
political power, and social and cultural autonomy
from the 1890s to the near present. For the most
part, this course will focus on the unions and related
organizations forged by workers throughout the
past century-from major umbrella groups like the
American Federation of Labor, the Industrial Workers of the World, and the Congress of Industrial
Organizations, to important sectoral actors like the
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the United
Automobile Workers, the American Federation of
Teachers, and the United Farm Workers. The central questions of the course will be: When, where,
and why have US workers organized collectively
in the 20th century? And how successful have they
been? What has been the response of employers,
the government, and the public at large to these
collective efforts of workers, and how and why have
those responses changed over time? What has been
the relationship between organized labor and racial
and gender discrimination, as well as the causes of
racial and gender equality? And how have Americans
generally, and workers in particular, understood the
labor movement in relation to capitalism, freedom,
and democracy? Students will be expected to write
several short papers, engage in regular classroom discussion, and screen several films outside of class.
AMST 40305. Colonial America
(3-0-3)
This course considers the history of New World
exploration and settlement by Europeans from the
15th to the 18th century. It examines the process
of colonization in a wide variety of cultural and
geographic settings. It explores the perspectives of
Native Americans, Europeans, and slaves with a particular emphasis on the consequences of interracial
contacts. We will discuss the goals and perceptions
of different groups and individuals as keys to understanding the violent conflict that became a central
part of the American experience. Lectures, class
discussions, readings, and films will address gender,
racial, class, and geographic variables in the peopling
(and de-peopling) of English North America.
and US Latino Christianity. Other important themes
include the changing role of Latinos in the US
immigrant church, the impact of Latin American
liberation theology on US Latinos, and the linkages
between religion and cultural identity among peoples
with roots in Mexico, the Hispanic Caribbean, and
Central and South America presently living in the
US Lectures and discussions will be supplemented
with visual material. Grading will be based on
midterm essay exams, class discussion, and a final
research paper (12 pages).
AMST 40306. Catholicism in TwentiethCentury America
AMST 40309. US Foreign Policy before 1945
(3-0-3)
The course examines the patterns of Catholic intellectual life, religious culture, social engagement, and
public presence in the United States throughout the
20th century. Themes receiving special attention in
the lectures and class discussions will include the US
Catholic response to the theory of evolution and to
the social sciences, the rise and decline of Thomism
as the philosophical framework of Catholic thought
and education, Catholic participation in the labor
movement and the Civil Rights Movement, the new
theologies and social ethics of the ‘60s, the impact
of the Second Vatican Council, shifting modes of
public Catholicism, and the Catholic culture wars of
the 1980s and 1990s.
AMST 40307. Sex, Sexuality, and Gender in
the United States to 1890
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): HIST 32706
Sexuality, like other areas of social life, has a history.
Yet historians have only written about the history of
sex for the last 40 years or so. This course will both
introduce students to a variety of current themes in
the history of sexuality and invite them to consider
how they themselves might research and write that
history. The class will survey recent topics in the
history of sexuality from first colonial settlement to
the end of the Victorian era. Issues we may consider
include different religions’ attitudes toward sexuality (the Puritans were not anti-sex!), how different
cultures’ views of sex shaped relations between colonists and Indians, why sex was an important factor
in establishing laws about slavery in Virginia, birth
control and abortion practices, changing patterns
of courtship, men who loved men and women who
loved women, and why the average number of children in American families fell by 50 percent between
1790 and 1890.
AMST 40308. Latinos and Religion
(3-0-3)
This course examines the unique religious history of
US Latinos/as, starting with the Spanish and Latin
American colonial origins and outlining the rise of
parishes and congregations north of Mexico. Readings and lectures will present historical, sociological,
and theological methods for examining contemporary issues facing Latino Catholics and Protestants,
such as social justice movements, religion in the
thought of prominent Latino/a writers and commentators, and ecumenical trends in Latin American
(3-0-3)
This course covers the main developments in American foreign policy from the Spanish American War
in 1898 through World War II. It traces the emergence of the United States as a major world power
and examines in some detail how the United States
became involved in two world wars.
AMST 40310. Medicine in Modern History
(3-0-3)
An exploration of themes in European and American
medicine. This course integrates the perspectives and
issues of social history—Who were the medical practitioners? Who were their patients? What relations
existed between these groups? How have the realities
of illness and death figured in the lives of ordinary
people in different places and times?—with the
perspectives and issues of the history or medicine as
a science—What understandings of the human body
and its ills have practitioners had? What tools have
they developed and used for intervening in illnesses?
Topics include the humoral pathology, epidemics
as social crises, the rise of pathological anatomy, the
germ theory and public health, the transformation of
the hospital, the history of nursing, changing modes
of health care, finance and administration, and relations between “regular” doctors and sectarian medical traditions such as homeopathy and osteopathy.
AMST 40311. Moving New Directions: African
Diaspora
(3-0-3)
Migration and the emergence of new identities have
defined the formation and evolution of the African
diaspora in the modern era. This course is designed
to introduce students of African-American studies
to the concept of African diaspora and to provide a
framework for understanding how it has changed
over time. What constitutes the African diaspora?
How was it formed? How have people of African descent forged new identities in the Atlantic World and
what are the implications of identity construction
for people of African descent in the future? These
questions form the basis of our historical study of the
African diaspora. We examine themes of migration
and cultural change through comparative case studies of black communities in the United States, the
Caribbean, Africa, and Latin America.
The first half of the course will focus on the Atlantic
slave trade, the middle passage, and slavery in the
Americas. We will examine identity and culture for
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people of African descent in South Carolina, Louisiana, and Jamaica. The second half of the course
will deal with the problem of freedom in the 19thcentury Atlantic World. We will direct our attention
to free black populations and Creole communities in
Louisiana, Brazil, and Sierra Leone, and West Africa.
We will also consider the impact of emancipation at
the end of the 19th century through an examination
of black American emigration movements, “back to
Africa” and to the US West, and Afro-Brazilian identity in a post-emancipation society. This course will
conclude with a discussion of the state of the African
diaspora today and its implications for future transformations in African- American identity.
AMST 40312. Consumers and Culture in US
History
(3-0-3)
This course will explore the emergence of modern
consumer society in the United States. From the vantage point of the close of the 20th century, American
culture seems to be defined by the conspicuous
consumption of goods. It is important to remember,
however, that phenomena like mass marketing,
advertising, and mass distribution were not always
so entrenched. A historical approach allows us to
explore the changing relationship of Americans to
consumer goods and the cultural transformation that
went along with this change. The course is roughly
chronological, with readings organized around a
specific theme each week. The course will consist of
both lectures and class discussions. Topics covered
include the evolution of the American economy, advertising, retailing, gender and consumption, leisure,
and consumer protest. There will be two short written assignments and one longer research paper.
AMST 40313. Revolutionary America
(3-0-3)
This course examines the American Revolution as
both a process of change and an event with profound
consequences for the history of the American people.
It emphasizes conditions and consequences of the
Revolution for common people and for those living
at the fringes of economic subsistence and political
power—laborers, women, slaves, and Native Americans—in addition to the ambitions of the founding
fathers. The long-term preconditions for revolution
are considered within the contexts of domestic and
international politics. We will focus on the conflict
that was the heart of the Revolutionary experience
and that was the fundamental legacy of the war for
American society.
AMST 40314. History of the American
Woman II
(3-0-3)
This course surveys women’s relationship to the
social, cultural, and political developments shaping
American society from 1890 to the present, concentrating on developments in women’s activism and in
popular culture. Topics include the new woman and
progressivism, the transformation of feminism in the
1920s, women’s paid and unpaid labor, the “feminine mystique,” the Women’s Liberation Movement
of the 1960s, and changing gender roles in recent decades. Particular attention will be paid to the impact
of class, race, and ethnicity on issues of gender.
AMST 40315. African-American Politics,
1900–50
(3-0-3)
This course examines the diverse struggles for full
citizenship and human rights on the part of African
Americans from 1900 to 1950. The topics to be
studies include the Great Migration, the New Negro
Movement and Harlem Renaissance, the Marcus
Garvey Movement, the rise of A. Philip Randolph’s
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the involvement of blacks in the Communist Party, and the
transformations in black culture and politics brought
about by the two World Wars. This course will examine the efforts of liberal-integrationist, socialist,
communist, and Black Nationalist organizations to
combat white racism and qualitatively improve the
lives of blacks in various regions of the United States.
It hopes to convey blacks’ diverse thoughts on complex issues such as identity, politics, class, gender,
race, and nationality.
AMST 40316. Women and War in US History
(3-0-3)
This course will explore new perspectives on wars
fought by Americans and will provide an overview
of American conflicts from the colonists’ wars with
Native Americans to the current war on terrorism.
By looking at the various roles women play in war
and examining the ways in which women’s lives can
be shaped by war, the course will also introduce
students to important themes in women’s history
and to new methodologies influential in the study of
history. Films and documentaries, and primary and
secondary readings will be used.
AMST 40319. History of Cubans in the US
(3-0-3)
Cuba’s national hero, Jose Marti, spent most of
his adult life in the United States, from 1880 until
shortly before his death fighting in Cuba in 1895.
Ironically, his most influential writings on Cuban
nationalism, still used today by the Cuban government to justify many of their political positions,
were written in the United States. Despite the deeply
conflictive relationship between Cuba and the
United States since 1959, Cubans have always had
“ties of singular intimacy” with their neighbors to the
north, which explains their northward migrations.
For two centuries Cubans have lived in the United
States, mostly in Florida but also in many of the
nation’s largest cities including New York, Chicago,
Los Angeles, Dallas, Houston, and New Orleans.
This course will examine the Cuban experience in
the United States, especially through the concept of
exile. As early as 1820, Cuban exiles arrived in the
United States to promote Cuban independence from
Spain and, since that time, Cuban communities have
consistently influenced political and socioeconomic
developments in their homeland. The course will
examine the history of Cuban immigration, community formation, socioeconomic integration, political
development, expressions of exile and national identity, the emergence of Cuban-American identity and
impact of Cuban exiles on US foreign policy towards
Cuba. The course will also explore those aspects of
Cuban history that have contributed historically
to the creation of exile communities in the United
States, including Cuba’s nineteenth century wars of
independence against Spain, early 20th- century efforts at political stability, and the Cuban Revolution
of 1959.
AMST 40320. History of American Women I
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the social, cultural, and political
developments that shaped American women’s lives
from the colonial period to 1890. It will analyze
both the ways American culture defined women’s
place during different historical periods and the ways
women themselves worked to comply with or to
resist those definitions. Topics include pre-industrial
society, transformations in work and family life,
industrialism and class formation, slavery, women’s
culture, and the emergence of a woman’s movement.
Throughout, stress will be laid on the importance of
class, race, and ethnicity in shaping women’s historical experience.
AMST 40321. America between the World
Wars
(3-0-3)
This course will examine the social, cultural, and
political developments that occurred between the
United States’ entrance into World War I and the
conclusion of the Second World War. Topics to be
considered include the post-World War I resurgence
of nativism, the changing social norms and gender
roles of the 1920s, the rise of mass culture, the Great
Depression, the New Deal, and of course, American
involvement in both world wars, with an emphasis
on the home front.
AMST 40322. Chicano History
(3-0-3)
This course will trace the history of Mexican
Americans from colonial times to the present. After
examining Hispanic colonial origins in 16th-century
New Spain, the course will trace the development
of Spanish/Mexican colonial communities in what
is now the US Southwest, follow their conquest and
incorporation into the United States, and explore the
development of a Mexican-American identity in the
19th century. Themes to be examined for the 20th
century include immigration, community growth
and formation, exclusion and the Civil Rights Movement, cultural expressions, and the nationalizing of
the Mexican-American experience.
AMST 40323. American Indian History
(3-0-3)
This course examines the complicated history of
American Indian relations with the British North
American colonies and the United States. Beginning
with a brief survey of American Indian cultures, we
will focus on relations along the moving frontier
between the two peoples. Topics include mutual
adaptation and exchange, invasion and resistance,
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environment and economics, and racism and ethnic
identity. Covering almost half a millennium, the
course will give roughly equal time to the four centuries that followed the first serious attempt at British
colonization (1585). Almost two-thirds of the course
will, therefore, deal with peoples east of the Mississippi River in the years before 1838.
exam, a research paper, and a final exam. During the
semester, students will be required to prepare several
shorter papers as progress reports on their research
papers. Students taking this course already should
have taken POLS 10100 or 20100, Introduction to
American Government. It also will be helpful to have
had an Introduction to Economics course.
AMST 40326. African-American Resistance
AMST 40403. Field Seminar in American
Politics
(3-0-3) Pierce
An exploration of a series of cases of AfricanAmerican resistance throughout US history.
AMST 40400. Constitutional Law
(3-0-3)
This course examines the main principles of American Constitutional Law, the process of constitutional
interpretation, and the role of the Supreme Court
in the American political system. Topics covered are
presidential war powers, congressional-executive relations, free speech, church-state relations, the right to
life (abortion, right to die, and death penalty), race
and gender discrimination, and the American federal
system. A good deal of attention is given over to
recent personnel changes on the Supreme Court and
the extent to which these changes are reflected in the
court’s opinions. A background in American national
government is desirable.
AMST 40401. American Political Parties
(3-0-3)
Political parties play many vital roles in American
politics: They educate potential voters about political
processes, policy issues, and civic duties. They mobilize citizens into political activity and involvement.
They provide vital information about public debates.
They control the choices-candidates and platforms
that voters face at the ballot box. They influence
and organize the activities of government officials.
Most importantly, by providing a link between
government and the governed, they are a central
mechanism of representation. These roles—how well
they are performed, what bias exists, how they shape
outcomes, how they have changed over time—have
consequences for the working of the American political system. This class explores the contribution
of political parties to the functioning of American
democracy.
AMST 40402. Public Policy and Bureaucracy
(3-0-3)
This course explores the process, substance, and
efficacy of public policy making and policy implementation in the United States. We begin by asking:
Why do some problems become public issues while
others do not? Attention is given to how government
identifies problems and formulates policies meant to
address them. Then we ask, once formulated, how
policies are implemented. The course will examine
government’s “menu” of options for policy implementation. Student research papers will focus on the
evolution over time of a specific policy, examining
how that policy’s implementation affected its impact.
Requirements for the course include a midterm
(3-0-3)
This is the “core” seminar in American politics,
designed to provide a survey of the most important
literature in the field. The seminar is intended to
present the student with a broad, eclectic view of the
current state of the literature in American politics.
The readings attempt to provide a sampling of classic
and recent theory and substance in the hope of suggesting where scholars stand, and where they seem to
be headed, with respect to some major topics in the
American subfield.
AMST 40404. First Amendment
(3-0-3)
This seminar offers an advanced exploration of
Supreme Court jurisprudence involving freedom of
speech and expression, freedom of the press, freedom
of association, and freedom of religion and religious
establishment. We examine the reasoning and assumptions behind these opinions, and we assess the
foundations and implications of competing interpretations of cherished constitutional principles. We
conclude by evaluating the effects of these decisions
on American politics and American society. Requirements include midterm and final exams, a research
paper, and active class participation. Enrollment is
limited to students with previous course work in
constitutional law or constitutional interpretation.
AMST 40405. American Constitutional Law
(3-0-3)
The focus of this course is the Constitution as interpreted by the United States Supreme Court. It covers
landmark constitutional cases in leading topical areas
such as abortion, death penalty, freedom of speech,
church-state relations, equal protection, and the war
powers of president and congress. The main goals of
the course are three: (1) To introduce students to the
leading principles and policies of American Constitutional Law; (2) to acquaint them with the process
of constitutional interpretation; and (3) to explore
with them the role of the federal judiciary, and most
particularly the Supreme Court, in the American
political system.
AMST 40406. Federalism and the Constitution
(3-0-3)
Beginning in 1995, the Rehnquist Court has sought
to restore some of the immunities from federal
power that the states had enjoyed prior to the late
1930s. These cases reflect the view that “federalism”
is a fundamental feature of the American constitutional order, an institutional principle dear to the
framers of the Constitution and integral to the values
of “limited government” and “liberty.” Critics of
this view contend that the framers’ first priority was
a strong national government and that advances in
personal and civil liberties in America historically
have come at the expense of “states rights.” This
course asks what “federalism” is in the American
context, whether “federalism” in any sense is a
genuine constitutional principle, and if so, for what
textual, historical, or moral reasons. The first part
of the course will be concerned with questions of
constitutional interpretation and the decisions of the
Supreme Court in the principal areas of federal-state
conflict: commerce clause, civil rights, and criminal
justice. The second part of the course will turn to
what statesmen and philosophers have said about our
subject and related matters. In addition to around
30 Supreme Court cases, readings will include selections from The Federalist Papers and writings by
Tocqueville, Calhoun, Lincoln, Martin Diamond,
Herbert Storing, Charles Taylor, and John Rawls.
Grades will be based on an objective exam covering the Supreme Court cases, optional oral reports
in class, and a term paper. This course is available
for graduate credit (as a reading course), with the
instructor’s approval. Interested graduate students
can reach Prof. Barber at flaxbar@msn. com.
AMST 40407. Constitutional Interpretation
(3-0-3)
Americans have always debated Supreme Court
opinions on specific constitutional questions involving the powers of government and the rights of individuals and minorities. The leading objective of this
course is to familiarize students with the basic issues
of constitutional interpretation and to show how
they influence questions involving constitutional
rights and powers and the scope of judicial review.
AMST 40408. Comparative Constitutional
Liberties
(3-0-3)
This course is offered in the London Program. The
course focuses on the civil liberties jurisprudence of
England and the United States. It compares American constitutional cases with English judicial decisions and statutory policies on church-state relations,
freedom of speech, political representation, sex and
racial discrimination, and privacy and personhood
(dealing mainly with abortion, death penalty, and
assisted suicide). A major question prompted by
these readings—one we will periodically explore—is
whether civil liberties or fundamental rights are more
effectively secured under England’s unwritten or
America’s written Constitution. Still another question the class will explore is the manner in which
English judges and parliamentarians seek to reconcile the principles of parliamentary supremacy and
constitutionalism in the face of the recently enacted
Human Rights Act (incorporating the European
Convention on Human Rights into English law).
AMST 40409. Comparative Government
(3-0-3)
This course is offered in the London Program. Its
purpose is to assess the integrity and validity of
American governmental institutions and political
processes in the light of the German and English
models of constitutional governance. The seminar
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plans to focus on executive power arrangements, executive-legislative relations, judicial review, relations
between levels of government, electoral and party
systems, and selected areas of public policy.
AMST 40412. Schools and Democracy
(3-0-3) Campbell
Education sits high on the public policy agenda.
We are living in an era of innovations in education
policy, with heated discussion surrounding issues
such as vouchers, charter schools, and the No Child
Left Behind Act. This course introduces students to
the arguments for and against these and other educational innovations, and does so through the lens
of how schools affect the civic health of the nation.
Often forgotten amidst debates over school choice
and standardized testing is the fact that America’s
schools have a civic mandate to teach young people
how to be engaged citizens. Students in this course
will grapple with the civic implications of America’s
educational landscape, and have an opportunity to
propose ways to improve the civic education provided to young people.
AMST 40413. Race and the Constitution
(3-0-3) Zuckert
This course will cover the decisions of the Supreme Court in the area of race relations, from the
19th-century problem of fugitive slaves to current
problems involving school desegregation, affirmative
action and “private” acts of race discrimination. Class
will focus not only on court cases but also on the
broader constitutional and philosophical implications.
AMST 40414. Diplomacy of American Foreign
Policy
(3-0-3) Kamman
The United States emerged from World War II in
a new peacetime role as a superpower. We had to
discover for ourselves how to combine diplomacy
and military power in a manner consistent with our
democratic principles. While the policy choices were
stark in the days of the Cold War, they have become
more complex in recent years. Presented by a career
diplomat who headed US overseas missions in four
countries, the course emphasizes case studies and the
practical problems that have confronted US leaders
from the end of World War II to the present. The
issues treated will illustrate the height of tensions in
the Cold War, the emergence of detente and deterrence, and the challenges of the global agenda after
the end of the Cold War. The course aims to help
the student understand current foreign policy issues,
which will be discussed briefly in class. A research
paper (10 pages), a midterm exam, and a final exam
are required.
AMST 40500. Ethnicity in America
(3-0-3) Chrobot
A study of the ethnic and racial formation of American society and cultural pluralism; a review of the
theory and history of ethnicity, its policy implications for family, education, economics, religion, government, and international relations; and in-depth
study of one ethnic group of choice.
AMST 40501. Theorizing Popular Culture
(3-0-3) Pressler
The first half of the course is designed to introduce
a variety of theoretical perspectives to the students.
We develop a historical overview of popular cultural
theory and the several iterations it has taken, to
include mass culture theory, Marxism, the Frankfurt
Schools, Structuralism, Semiotics, Feminism, and
Post-Modernism. During the first section of the
course, students will be required to write a paper using one of the theories to analyze a popular culture
phenomenon of the instructor’s choice. The second
half of the semester is devoted to a historical analysis
of the social impact and meaning of rock’n’roll. I
begin with a demonstration of African music, using
recordings of early chants and celebratory music,
and then give the class some example of known slave
songs, indicating the presence, as early as 1750,
of elements that eventually became R and B, then
rock’n’roll. This course is not recommended for
students who have taken SOC 34151, as the content
will overlap.
AMST 40502. Deviant Behavior
(3-0-3)
This course is concerned primarily with the sociological conceptions and theories of deviance.
At the onset, deviance is differentiated from those
phenomena designated as social problems and social
disorganization. The remainder of the course focuses
on deviant acts and deviants. Various responses are
explored to questions such as: Who are deviants?
What does it mean to be a deviant—to the deviant
himself, as well as to others? What common social
processes and experiences do most deviants undergo?
Various theories or models of delinquency, crime,
suicide, sex deviation, and drug use are used to aid
in constructing a sociological understanding of deviance, the analysis of deviant acts, and the formation
of deviant careers or roles.
AMST 40503. Theoretical Criminology
(3-0-3)
This course will introduce theoretical interpretations
of criminal behavior, empirical research on crime
in diverse contexts, and policy debates on crime
control and punishment. Our intent will be to raise
critical questions and to challenge commonly held
views about the nature of crime and punishment in
the United States today. As students of sociology, we
will operate under the assumption that crime and
punishment are social phenomena; they can only
be understood by analyzing their relationship to
the broader social, political, and cultural context in
which they exist. We shall explore a variety of theoretical perspectives, both classical and contemporary,
that attempt to uncover the causes, etiology, and
solutions of the problem of criminal behavior. This
class cannot be taken if the student has previously
taken SOC 30732, because of content overlap.
AMST 40504. Meaning and Materialism in
Modern Life
(3-0-3)
In the 20th century, the twin problems of meaning and materialism have come to the forefront of
modern civilization, forming the basis of variety
of philosophies and social theories, animating
revolutionary movements in art, looming as the
silent specter behind mass society and its dramas of
consumption. It is by no means clear that the massive technological advances and material gains in
advanced industrial societies have contributed to a
better way of life—many would say increased meaninglessness is the actual result.
AMST 40505. Social Demography of the US
Latin Population
(2-0-2)
This course is an introduction to the social demography of Latino or Hispanic populations in the United
States as to historical background, sociological fields,
and current statistics and studies. First, in exploring
the demographic perspective on the Latino population, a strikingly young and increasing segment of
the US population, the processes of fertility, mortality, and migration are presented. Next to be addressed
is the literature on conceptualizing and quantifying
the US Latino population, legal frameworks for residence status of migrants, and Latinos in the context
of social institutions of family, education, and government. In the future, the changing Latino population is expected to contribute to a US population
profile different from the US population of the past
century. Thus, the course is relevant in contemporary
discussions of immigration policy, globalization, and
environment.
AMST 40506. Sociology of the Body
(3-0-3)
The human body, that extraordinary organic basis
of the self and its sign-making abilities, remains very
much present in human communication and culture.
Though many of our cognitive beliefs may have been
developed in civilized societies and their cultural
conventions, the self reaches deep into the human
body, and that body was refined over many tens of
thousands of years of hunter-gatherer life, and developed over an even longer period of hominid, primate, and mammalian evolution. This course aims
to focus directly on the organic human body itself as
a center of self and society. We will explore a variety
of readings related to the human body as organic
matrix of meaning, and that reveal bodily bases of
social life, such as Ashley Montagu’s Touching: On the
Significance of Skin, or issues of human development.
We will also explore the body as a source of self-originated experience through class “practice” sessions,
and ways contemporary techno-culture seems to seek
to displace bodily based experience.
AMST 40507. Religion in Post-War America
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the major developments in
religious life in the United States since the 1950s
through an in-depth examination of several of the
most important recent books on the subject, such
as Wade Clark Roof ’s Spiritual Marketplace, Tom
Beaudoin’s Virtual Faith, Christian Smith’s American
Evangelicalism, and Helen Berger’s A Community
of Witches. With these works as the backdrop, each
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student will research and write his or her family’s
religious history across three generations.
more realistically the diversity of Native American
culture.
AMST 40508. Latino Image in American Films
AMST 43108. Literary Journalism
(3-0-3)
This course traces the historical depiction of Chicanos, Mexicanos, Puerto Ricans, Cubans, and other
Latinos in Hollywood-made movies. Cinematic
plots, roles, and motifs, from the earliest of silent
films through the onset of the 1980s, are examined
to explore the changing physical, social, and cultural
definitions of Latinos in the United States. All films
and filmmakers are considered within their historical context. Though the main object of study is the
Latino image, the course also surveys corresponding
images for other ethnic minority groups.
AMST 40509. Social Demography of the US
Latino Population
(3-0-3)
This course is an introduction to the social demography of Latino or Hispanic populations in the United
States as to historical background, sociological fields,
and current statistics and studies. First, in exploring
the demographic perspective on the Latino population, a strikingly young and increasing segment of
the US population, the processes of fertility, mortality, and migration are presented. Next to be addressed
is the literature on conceptualizing and quantifying
the US Latino population, legal frameworks for residence status of migrants, and Latinos in the context
of social institutions of family, education, and government. In the future, the changing Latino population is expected to contribute to a US population
profile different from the US population of the past
century. Thus, the course is relevant in contemporary
discussions of immigration policy, globalization, and
environment.
(3-0-3)
This writing course is open by application to a few
students who have shown unusual promise in other
journalism courses and/or have demonstrated superior writing skills in student publications or media
internships. Literary journalism is a demanding form
of communication that combines fictional techniques with scrupulous adherence to fact. Students
will be responsible for two to three major pieces of
writing and will work closely with one another and
the instructor, who is the editor emeritus of Notre
Dame Magazine and an experienced freelance writer.
AMST 43109. Material America: Creating,
Collecting, Consuming
(3-0-3)
A seminar exploring how historians, archaeologists,
art historians, folklorists, geographers, and cultural
anthropologists use material culture as important
evidence in interpreting the American historical and
contemporary experience. Research fieldwork in area
museums and historical agencies such as the Snite
Museum, the Northern Indiana Center For History,
National Studebaker Museum, and Copshaholm/
Oliver Mansion will be part of the seminar.
AMST 43110. Media Ethics
(3-0-3)
Students will contextualize the films via a reader
packet drawing on articles from anthropology, film
studies, basic film production, and culture theory.
Course work will include research papers and the
production of a short visual narrative piece representing students’ conceptualizations of a theme.
(3-0-3)
This course will examine the journalistic and ethical
challenges that newsroom managers face as well as
the issues that reporters in the field must tackle on
a daily basis. Roughly half of the course will deal
with case studies of ethical dilemmas and the other
half will involve students in making choices for the
front of the mythical newspaper. Although there will
be readings from books on the topics, students will
be expected to read The New York Times, The South
Bend Tribune, and The Observer on a regular basis,
especially on the class days when the front-page decisions will be made. The stories in those newspapers
will provide the basis for those decisions. We will
also consider how television deals with news on local
and network levels.
AMST 40601. Native North American Art
AMST 43111. Whiteness Studies
AMST 40600. Film and Society
(3-0-3)
Traditional Native North American art will be studied through form, technique, and context, as well
as the perception of this art as exemplified through
changing content, technique, and context. Students
will work with the collections in the Snite Museum
of Art.
AMST 40602. Native Americans in Fact and
Fiction
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on our images of Native Americans and how popular and scientific writing and
film may have shaped these images. The course uses
books and film displaying Indian stereotypes and
compares them to ethnographic studies which reveal
(3-0-3)
Over the last decade, “whiteness studies” has been all
the rage in academic disciplines as diverse as law and
literature, anthropology and art. This course will be
a high-level introduction to and critical appraisal of
this burgeoning literature -particularly as it relates to
American Studies. We will examine some of its key
texts from its earliest roots among African-American
scholars, to its more recent incarnations in US history, literary criticism, critical race and legal studies,
sociology, anthropology, and more. We will also
examine recent attempts-both scholarly and popularto make sense of this literature. Along the way, we
will focus on the following key questions: What is
“whiteness studies”? Where did it come from? What
is it so popular now? What are some of its contributions and limitations? What is its future?
AMST 43112. Religion and Women’s Rights
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on religious aspects of the
women’s rights movement and women’s movements
within religious communities. Focusing primarily
on the Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish traditions,
we will examine how women have understood the
relationship between their religious beliefs and their
interest in expanding women’s roles. From this
beginning, we will explore several historical and
contemporary examples of the influence of religion
on the women’s rights movement and, by the 20th
century, the influence of the women’s movement in
American religion.
AMST 43113. Understanding Story: Conflict,
Culture, Identity
(3-0-3)
During the last decade interest in narratives has
increased dramatically. Feminist studies, cultural
studies, and anthropology have broadened our appreciation for the role story plays not simply in
personal psychology but also in constructing and
mediating our social life. The purpose of this seminar-style course is to investigate the shape, purposes,
and multiple meanings of narratives both in the lives
of individuals and within institutions and cultures.
In order to understand how story influences personal identity, contributes to or ameliorates conflict,
constructs, deconstructs, and reconstructs history,
and advances political agendas, we will examine how
story is used by (1) journalists in reporting news as
story; (2) medical professionals in collecting case
histories; (3) ethnographers in describing unfamiliar
cultural practices or investigating inter-group or
inter-state conflict situations; (4) historians in interpreting the past; (5) political leaders in establishing
public policy and political power; and (6) advertising
and marketing interests.
AMST 43114. Nature in America
(3-0-3)
A seminar designed to explore the concept of nature in the American historical and contemporary
experience within an interdisciplinary context of
art, history, literature, and ecology. In addition to
weekly reading discussions, the seminar will meet,
on a number of occasions, at several “nature” sights:
Morris Conservatory and Muessel-Ellison Tropical
Gardens; Potawatomi Zoo; Elkhart Environmental
Center; Shiojiri Niwa Japanese Garden; Fernwood
Botanical Garden and Nature Preserve; University of
Notre Dame Grene-Nieuwland Herbarium. Purpose:
to study nature in American art (painting, photography, sculpture). Seminar meetings will be held at the
Snite Museum of Art; South Bend Regional Museum
of Art; South Bend Regional Museum of Art; and
the Midwest Museum of American Art.
AMST 43115. Advanced Reporting
(3-0-3)
This is an advanced course in journalistic reporting
and writing devoted to learning how to prepare, in a
professional manner, in-depth articles on issues and
events of community interest for Notre Dame and in
this area. Emphasis will be on the techniques, ethics,
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american studies
and responsibilities of conducting interviews and
research and crafting pieces for newspapers and other
publications.
spiritual quest. Or, as Ginsberg aptly put it—an
“American lonely Prose Trumpeter of drunken Buddha Sacred Heart.”
AMST 43119. Building America: Architecture,
Economics, Politics
AMST 43124. Comparative Cultural Studies
(3-0-3)
A seminar designed to examine the social and
economic factors, energy and land use policies, demographic urban/suburban trends, technological innovations, and artistic impulses that have produced
the American built environment, 1640–1940. Comparing several building types-the private residence,
the workplace, and the public building-the seminar
will explore structures and spaces as material culture
evidence of American domestic, real estate, political,
and cultural history.
AMST 43120. Leadership and Social
Responsibility
(3-0-3)
This course examines leadership and empowerment
issues from multidisciplinary perspectives, focusing
on the role of the leader within organizations that
promote service, social action, or other forms of
social responsibility. Alternative models of leadership are explored, with attention to value and moral
implications.
AMST 43121. American Spaces
(3-0-3) Schlereth
A comparative survey of the multiple histories of
several natural and human-made environments created in America from the New England common to
the Los Angeles freeway. Using specific cases studies,
the course will analyze sites such as the Mesa Verde
pueblo, Rockefeller Center, the Southern plantation,
the Midwest Main Street, the Prairie-style residence,
the Brooklyn Bridge, New Harmony (Indiana), US
Route 40, the American college campus, Pullman
(Illinois), the skyscraper, Spring Grove Cemetery
(Cincinnati), the Victorian suburb, Grand Central
Station, Golden Gate Park, Coney Island, Yosemite
National Park, Chautauqua (New York), and the
1939 New York World’s Fair.
AMST 43122. Grecian Architecture and
Furniture I
(3-0-3)
Students explore Notre Dame’s holdings of British
and American architectural books that introduced
“Grecian” architecture to the English-speaking
world.
AMST 43123. Jack Kerouac, the Beats, and
Dylan
(3-0-3)
This seminar will re-examine Kerouac and his prose
in relation to Beat subculture and the larger context
of post-World War II American society. Although
the work of other Beat writers, such as William S.
Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, and Gary Snyder will be
considered, the primary focus will be on Kerouac.
Moreover, the seminar will question the cultural
codification of Kerouac as “King of the Beats” and
advance the notion that he was a prose artist on a
(3-0-3)
The purpose of this seminar is to introduce students
to comparative dimensions of American Studies.
International perspectives will be explored and
approaches that compare American culture with
another national culture will be encouraged. Intranational comparative topics will also be welcome (example: Asian-American studies). Concepts, methods,
and materials related to comparative studies will be
examined. Students will work on selecting appropriate comparative topics, organizing information and
ideas, developing themes, and designing an interdisciplinary framework for their projects.
AMST 43125. Writing and Editing
(3-0-3)
This course takes students beyond the basics of
reporting the news to work on longer journalistic
projects and the editing process involved in completing more extended features and pieces of analysis.
Students will review assignments completed for the
class and act as editors to make suggestions for improving individual efforts. Several projects will make
up the principal work of the semester.
AMST 43126. American Nonfiction Narrative:
The Literature of Social Concerns
(3-0-3)
This course will-through both reading and writingexplore the place and the art of what is often called
literary journalism or narrative nonfiction. What
makes for a compelling story? Why employ the use
of narrative? How does it form our view of people
and events? We’ll read nonfiction narratives on such
issues as war, poverty, and race. Readings will include
John Hersey’s Hiroshima, Philip Gourevitch’s We
Wish to Inform You that Tomorrow We will be Killed
with Our Families, and Richard Wright’s Black Boy,
as well as the instructor’s The Other Side of the River.
We’ll also explore the craft and work with rigor
and discipline on the art of reporting and writing
story. There will be regular writing assignments, and
students will be encouraged to report and craft a
narrative on an issue of interest to them. This course
will be run as a seminar, so there will be an emphasis
on critical class discussion, including presentations
by students.
AMST 43128. Limitless Desire: Literature and
the Creation of Consumer Culture in America
(3-0-3) Meissner
This course traces the social changes which accompanied America’s movement from early retailing
to a full-blown consumer culture. Beginning with
representations from the later part of the nineteenth
century, particularly of the development of Chicago
as a mail order capital of the world and moving into
the present through an examination of television
shopping networks, this course will use material
from a variety of perspectives and disciplines to
examine what became a wholesale transformation of
American life. In attempting to trace the trajectory
of change from a country often identified by its rural
isolation to a country of relentless publicity, from the
farm to Paris Hilton, (who returned to The Simple
Life), we will look at a series of linkages each of
which played a specific and contributory role in the
cultural shift toward a fully saturated consumerism.
for instance, the early mail order catalogue empires
of Aaron Montgomery Ward and Richard Warren
Sears depended on the capacity of the railroad and
postal service to transport their goods from shopping catalogues to country kitchens, goods which
went beyond kitchen utensils, clothes, ornaments
and shoes to include assembly-ready homes. South
Bend has several Sears and Roebuck homes and part
of our class time will be spent in looking at these
houses in the context of the course themes. All of
our discussion will take place against the backdrop of
a larger question about the democratization of desire,
about whiter American culture became more or less
democratic after the introduction of the mail order
catalogue. Thus the linkage between the catalogue,
the home shopping network, and the notion that
freedom to desire goods is a measure of democratic
freedom. Of course, the possibilities for manipulation and control are also limitless.
AMST 43129. Images of Women in American
Cinema
(3-0-3) Halperin
In viewing any film, we must ask ourselves what the
filmmakers want us to think. To answer that question for a specific genre, we will be studying portrayals of 20th century- women in film and how these
images have evolved in reaction to, and as a backlash
against, the modern feminist movement.
AMST 43307. History of US South to 1877
(3-0-3)
This course will provide a survey of the American
South through Reconstruction. We will briefly
describe Native American societies and early Spanish settlements in Florida and the Southwest before
addressing in greater detail the political, cultural, and
social history of the region as it was settled beginning
in the Southeast. We will examine how ideas like
honor, freedom, patriarchy, and religious beliefs were
forged and evolved in the context of a slave economy,
and how they shaped the day’s political questions.
We will also consider the Confederate experience
and Reconstruction.
There will be one paper (30 percent), two exams (25
percent each), reading reports (10 percent) and class
participation (10 percent).
AMST 45900. Publishing Internship
(V-0-V)
Apprentice training with Notre Dame Magazine.
Satisfactory/unsatisfactory credit only.
AMST 45901. Community Service Internship
(3-0-3)
Apprentice training with community social service
organizations. Satisfactory/unsatisfactory credit only.
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anthropology
AMST 45902. Historical Research Internship
(3-0-3)
Apprentice training in archives or museums or
historical preservation with local organizations.
Satisfactory/unsatisfactory credit only.
AMST 45903. News Internship
(3-0-3)
Apprentice training with newspapers. Satisfactory/
unsatisfactory credit only.
AMST 45905. News Internship
(3-0-3)
Apprentice training with newspapers. Satisfactory/
unsatisfactory credit only.
AMST 46920. Directed Readings
(3-0-3)
Directed readings taught by individual faculty members. Permission required.
AMST 47910. Senior Honors
(0-0-3)
Senior Honors Program
AMST 47930. Special Studies: Reading and
Research
(V-0-V)
Special Studies offers students the opportunity to
pursue an independent, semester-long reading or
research project under the direction of a faculty
member. The subject matter of special studies must
not be duplicated in the regular curriculum.
Internships
All American Studies Internships provide opportunities for practical work experiences under the supervision of a professional. Students will spend nine to
twelve unpaid, supervised hours per week on the job,
the hours to be arranged between the student and
the “employer.” Intern candidates should so arrange
their academic schedule as to allow large chunks
of time for internship work, such as entire days or
entire mornings.
Anthropology
Chair:
Mark R. Schurr
Edmund P. Joyce Professor of Anthropology:
Roberto A. DaMatta (emeritus); James J.
McKenna
Nancy O’Neill Associate Professor of Anthropology:
Agustín Fuentes
Professors:
Leo A. Despres (emeritus); Carolyn Nordstrom; Carl W. O’Nell (emeritus); Irwin Press
(emeritus)
Associate Professors:
James O. Bellis; Susan D. Blum; Douglas
E. Bradley (concurrent); ; Rev. Patrick D.
Gaffney, CSC; Ian Kuijt (on leave fall 2005);
Joanne M. Mack (concurrent); Cynthia
Mahmood; Kenneth E. Moore (emeritus);
Mark R. Schurr; Susan G. Sheridan (on leave
spring 2006)
Assistant Professors:
Meredith S. Chesson; Gregory J. Downey (on
leave spring 2006); Daniel H. Lende; Lisa
Mitchell; Karen E. Richman
Visiting Assistant Professors:
Sara Busdiecker; Debra McDougall; Yorke
Rowan
Adjunct Associate Professor:
Robert Wolosin
Adjunct Instructor:
Devorah Snively
Program of Studies. The undergraduate program
in anthropology is designed to provide each student
with a broad, holistic, integrated and species-wide
perspective on contemporary human behavior.
Anthropology may be the only major that provides
significant intellectual and professional links with
the humanities and other social science fields, while
also providing separate bridges into both the natural
sciences and the field of business. In so doing the
anthropology major prepares students for successful entry into any number of fields and disciplines
and their appropriate professional graduate schools
including medical schools, public health, and law.
Human evolutionary models, critical comparative
analysis, ethnographic methods, and a variety of
developmental approaches are taught and applied in
our classes to such diverse topics and research areas
as: health; illness; addiction; human communication
(verbal and non-verbal); human origins; the nature
of social groups; the family; worldwide political and
socio-economic systems; religion; warfare; infancy
and childhood; non-human primate ecology and
behavior; the archaeology, prehistory, and ethnology
especially of North America and the Middle East;
sexuality; museum studies; China; Southeast Asia;
evolutionary medicine; martial arts; transnationalism; sex and gender; and medical anthropology.
In moving toward our goal to achieve national
prominence as one of the top undergraduate research
and teaching departments in the nation, our faculty
stress the importance of innovative and significant
undergraduate research. We aim to provide as many
majors as is possible with hands-on research experiences both in the field and laboratory. Two Smithsonian and two Chicago Field Museum summer
research internships created by the department are
available to majors and it is common that throughout the school year and summer that the faculty pair
up with students to conceptualize and work together
on research projects both here and abroad. Often
this collaborative research leads to joint publications. Our undergraduate students receive many
undergraduate research awards from the University
and regularly attend national professional meetings
and stand alongside graduate students and professors
from around the nation to present the results of their
research. Our anthropology minors also participate
to a high degree.
Aside from its applicability and relevance across different disciplines, professions, and careers, one of the
truly unique aspects of anthropology is that it changes in a most profound and insightful way the manner
in which our students experience and come to interpret their own lives. The subject of anthropology is,
of course, humankind as viewed not through a local
lens limited by the biases or world view of one’s own
culture, but by a view that attempts to reconcile and
understand the intersecting and sometimes conflicting, yet, often logical alternative ways by which our
fellow human beings live and think.
Perhaps it is the result of this very personal encounter, experienced alongside exposure to the very best
scholarship, that permits our anthropology students
to connect so easily and successfully with the diverse
professional communities to which they are drawn.
But whatever accounts for this relative fluidity by
which our graduates make the transition into so
many diverse fields, the knowledge and skills gained
by studying anthropology, in addition to providing
keen insights into others, enriches one’s understanding of one’s self. In this way anthropology maximizes
the chances of personal achievement and self-fulfillment, and proves a surprisingly powerful beginning
point for just about any career.
Programs for the Class of
2007 and beyond
1. The Major. There are no prerequisites to the
major. The major requires 27 credits, nine of which
must be in the sequence of fundamentals, including
ANTH 30101 (Fundamentals of Human Evolution), ANTH 30102 (Fundamentals of Archaeology), ANTH 30103 (Fundamentals of Social and
Cultural Anthropology), and ANTH 30104 (Fundamentals of Linguistic Anthropology). In addition, majors must take ANTH 40400 (Perspectives
in Anthropological Analysis), one methods course
(three credits), and 12 credits of electives. At least
six credits of the electives must be at the 40000
level. It is recommended that students take the fundamentals by the end of their junior year, whereas
ANTH 40400 is usually taken as a junior or senior.
2. The Honors Major. The honors major requires 33
credits. In addition to the above program, the honors
student will take one additional methods course
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anthropology
(three credits) and one additional 40000-level course
(three credits) taken in the senior year, which satisfies
the honors experience.
3. The Minor. The minor requires 15 credit hours.
There are no prerequisites. Students must take three
of the four fundamentals, ANTH 30101, 30102,
30103, and 30104. In addition, students must take
six credits of electives.
Courses taken for pass-fail credit will not satisfy
requirements for the major, the honors major, or the
minor.
Programs for the Class of
2006
1. The Major. There are no prerequisites to the major. The major requires 27 hours, six of which must
be in the sequence of fundamentals, either ANTH
30104 (Fundamentals of Linguistic Anthropology)
or ANTH 30103 (Fundamentals of Social and
Cultural Anthropology), and either ANTH 30102
(Fundamentals of Archaeology) or ANTH 30101
(Fundamentals of Human Evolution). ANTH
40400 (Development of Anthropological Theory)
and ANTH 47900 (Advanced Seminar) or an
equivalent are also required of all students in the
major sequence. It is recommended that students
take the fundamentals, ANTH 30103 or 30104 and
ANTH 30101 or 30102, by the end of their junior
year, whereas ANTH 40400 is usually taken as a junior or senior. ANTH 47900 is designed as a senior
capstone seminar. The remaining 15 hours must
be apportioned among various subareas as follows:
Approaches and Methods (six hours); Evolutionary
Perspectives and Cultural Adaptation (three hours);
Area Studies (three hours); and Topics in Anthropology (three hours). Courses taken for pass-fail credit
will not satisfy requirements for the major.
Courses in which graduate students may enroll and
for which graduate credit may be obtained are indicated with an asterisk (*) before the course number.
Special requirements are made of graduate students
who enroll in these courses.
ANTH 10109. Introduction to Anthropology
(7-0-3) Lende, McKenna, Richman
This course deals with the nature of anthropology as
a broad and diverse area of study. The anthropological study of humankind will be approached from the
perspectives of physical anthropology; prehistory and
archaeology; and linguistic anthropology and sociocultural anthropology. The diversity of humankind
will be explored in all its aspects from times past to
the present.
ANTH 10195. Introduction to Anthropology
Honors
(3-0-3)
Anthropology moves forward from the classification of our species in biological terms to explore, in
theory and by empirical investigation, the particular
forms of cultural expression that characterize the development of human societies and account for their
richness and their remarkable variety. It addresses
evolution and genetics, ecological adaptation, and
the emergence of complex societies. It looks into
language and other symbolic systems. It studies the
vast domain of social and cultural life, from kinship
to kingship and from cyborgs to shamans. Seminar
format.
ANTH 13181. Social Science University
Seminar
4. Anthropology and the Preprofessional Program.
Preprofessional students will find anthropology to be
a highly relevant major.
(3-0-3) Bellis
Anthropology, the holistic study of humans and their
societies and cultures, is the focus of this seminar
course. Through discussion and analysis of a variety
of anthropology texts, this seminar course aims to
develop writing skills among first-year students while
exposing them to some central problems and issues
within anthropology. Adopting an approach that
reflects the four-field character of anthropology, the
seminar will encourage students to explore topics
such as: (1) anthropology as a way of knowing; (2)
anthropology as an encounter with, and effort to
explain, human diversity; (3) anthropology as a discipline that uniquely contributes to our understanding
of the symbolic dimensions of human behavior and
communication; (4) anthropology as a discipline
that uniquely contributes to our understanding of
human strategies for subsistence and survival; and
(5) anthropology as a discipline that uniquely contributes to our understanding of human biological
and cultural origins.
5. The Honors Major. See program description
above.
This course satisfies the University social science
requirement.
Course Descriptions. The following course descriptions give the number and title of each course.
Lecture hours per week, laboratory, and/or tutorial
hours per week and credit hours per semester are enclosed within parentheses. The names of the instructors normally responsible for courses are indicated.
ANTH 20010. Cine De La Raza: Latino Film
2. The Major with Senior Thesis. Students may
elect to complete a senior thesis (see ANTH 48900)
for three credits in addition to the requirements for
the major.
3. The Minor in Anthropology. The minor requires
15 credit hours. There are no prerequisites. Students
must take either ANTH 30101 or 30102 and either
ANTH 30103 or 30104 and are free to elect the
remaining nine hours from among the 30000- and
40000-level courses in the department. Courses taken for pass-fail credit will not satisfy requirements
for the minor.
(1-0-1)
This mini-course will explore the Latino experience
from the perspective of contemporary Latino filmmakers. Ranging from cross-border organizing, to
economic globalization, transnational communities,
American society, and the impact of gentrification,
Latino filmmakers are giving voice to the complexity of La Raza in the United States. This course
will examine these themes through documentary,
independent film, and lectures and discussion with
the filmmakers themselves. Graded Satisfactory/
Unsatisfactory.
ANTH 20012. Icons and Action Figures in
Latino/Latina Literature
(3-0-3)
Understanding US Latino/Latina literature, art, and
film through its many allusions to and re-interpretations of traditional icons and historic figures as well
as legends, myths, popular figures, and action heroes/
heroines of the Americas (including those with
origins in Native American, Latino/Latina, African,
Asian, and European cultures).
ANTH 20040. Islamic Societies of the Middle
East and North Africa: Religion, History, and
Culture
(3-0-3) Afsaruddin
This course is an introductory survey of the Islamic
societies of the Middle East and North Africa from
their origins to the present day. It will deal with the
history and expansion of Islam, both as a world religion and civilization, from its birth in the Arabian
peninsula in the seventh century to its subsequent
spread to other parts of western Asia and North
Africa. Issues of religious and social ethics, political
governance, gender, social relations and cultural
practices will be explored in relation to a number
of Muslim societies in the region, such as in Egypt,
Morocco, and Iran. The course foregrounds the
diversity and complexities present in a critical area of
what we call the Islamic world today.
ANTH 20060. Islam: Religion and Culture
(3-0-3)
This course will discuss the rise of Islam in the
Arabian Peninsula in the seventh century and its
subsequent consolidation as a major world religion
and civilization. Lectures and readings will deal with
the life of the Prophet Muhammad, the Qur’an and
its interpretation, early Islamic history, community
formation, law and ritual, theology, philosophy, mysticism, and literature.
ANTH 20070. Introduction to Islamic
Civilization
(3-0-3)
This course introduces Islamic civilization and Muslim culture and societies through scholarly works,
literature, media clips, films, and audio-video material. The ultimate goal of this course is for students
to gain a better understanding of the Muslim peoples
and their culture and societies within the broader
context of Islamic civilization.
ANTH 20105. Introduction to Human Ethology
(3-0-3) McKenna
This course explores the cultural and evolutionary
origins of language, nonverbal communication,
infant behavior, parenting, human aggression, sexual
behavior, gender development, and human courtship
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anthropology
rituals. Each subject is examined from a cross
-species, cross-cultural, evolutionary, and developmental (including historical) perspective.
ANTH 20111. Anthropology of Human
Sexuality
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course seeks to examine human sexuality in an
anthropological context. We will review sexuality in
an evolutionary perspective via a comparison of nonhuman primate sexual behavior and the theoretical
constructs surrounding adaptive explanations for human sexuality. The physiology of sex and the development of the reproductive tract will also be covered.
The remainder of the course will consist of the evaluation of data sets regarding aspects of human sexual
practice, sexual preference, mate choice, gendered
sexuality, and related issues of human sexuality.
ANTH 20322. Black Music, World Market
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Slavery and the coerced migration of Africans to the
New World left a multitude of popular musical styles
from black peoples (and others) on both sides of the
Atlantic. This course is an examination of the diversity of black popular musics on a global scale.
ANTH 20330. Societies and Cultures of South
Asia
(3-0-3)
This course provides a broad introduction to societies and cultures of South Asia (including India,
Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, and
the Maldives).
ANTH 20335. Peoples of Southeast Asia
(3-0-3)
This course will introduce Southeast Asia through
close readings of important accounts of some of its
peoples. It will examine the region’s history, religions,
and social organizations tracing themes and variations that give this region its unity and, for all its
diversity and its many waves of immigration, make
Southeast Asia a field of related cultures.
ANTH 20340. Japanese Society
(3-0-3)
This course presents a survey of the social structures
and forms of expression that make up the complex
society of contemporary Japan, using anthropological writings, history, reporting, film, and fiction.
ANTH 20350. Chinese Society and Culture
(3-0-3) Blum
This course introduces students to the complexities
of contemporary Chinese society in the context of
the past. Topics covered include food, family and
gender, political activity, ethnicity and identity,
urban and rural life, work and unemployment,
economic complexity, multilingualism, arts, religion,
medicine and the body, and literature.
ANTH 20360. Societies and Cultures of Latin
America
(7.5-0-3)Downey
This course introduces students to the diverse cultures and societies of Latin America through historical, ethnographic, and literary study. Contemporary
issues of globalization, violence, and migration will
preoccupy the discussion of Central and South
America and the Caribbean today.
ANTH 20501. Archaeology: Myths and Facts
(1.5-0-1.5)
This course explores the public’s perception of what
archaeologists do and why they do it, and seeks to
better understand the broader goals and contributions of the study of archaeology. We will draw on
case studies from throughout the world, including
examples from North America, Europe, Australia,
and the Middle East.
ANTH 20502. Ancient Technology: Rocks to
Silicon Chips
(2-0-2)
This class explores the social, cultural and intellectual contexts of ancient technologies. In this class
students will learn when and how humans developed
critical technologies in the past, and discuss how
they have affected the world we live in today.
ANTH 20510. Origins of Human Civilization
(3-0-3) Rowan
This course is an introduction to archaeology and
to world prehistory. Themes include the origins of
food production, the rise of cultural complexity, the
peopling of the world, and the development of technology. The course covers cultural evolution from
the invention of the first stone tools through the
rise of ancient civilizations such as the Maya, Incas,
Egyptians, and peoples of the Near East.
ANTH 20540. Ancient Cities and States
(3-0-3)
This course looks at the archaeology of ancient cities
and states, with a special emphasis on those of the
eastern Mediterranean and the Near East. It also
explores theories about why ancient civilizations rose
and fell.
ANTH 30000. Gender/Sex/Power: Medieval
Europe
(3-0-3)
What has gender to do with sexuality and how can
we think about its entanglements in terms of a history of power? How do shifting borders between what
counts as masculine and what counts as feminine
produce other kinds of bodies in medieval societies:
bodies that don’t matter? Using original sources and
material remains produced from the third through
15th centuries, together with current feminist and
queer theory, students will think about the work of
gendered embodiment and the production of bodies
that don’t matter.
ANTH 30001. Mesoamerican Art: Olmec and
Their Legacy
(3-0-3) Bradley
The Olmec civilization was the mother culture of
Mesoamerica, and beginning in 1500 BC. It forged
the template of pre-Columbian cultural development
for the next 3,000 years. This course will introduce
the student to the Mesoamerican worldview by tracing the origins of Mexican art, religion, and culture
from the development of the Olmec civilization up
to Aztec times. Examination of the iconography and
function of art objects through slide lectures, as well
as hands-on, in-depth study of individual pieces of
sculpture. A good visual memory is helpful.
ANTH 30002. Irish Traditional Music
(3-0-3)
This course will examine the historical background
of the instrumental and song traditions; musical style
and its relationship to specific musicians and regional
traditions; performance practice; and the social and
cultural context of “Irish Traditional Music.”
ANTH 30003. History of Medicine
(3-0-3)
An exploration of themes in European and American
medicine. Topics include the humoral pathology,
epidemics as social crises, the rise of pathological
anatomy, the germ theory and public health, the
transformation of the hospital, the history of nursing, changing modes of health care, finance and administration, and relations between “regular” doctors
and sectarian medical traditions such as homeopathy
and osteopathy.
ANTH 30004. English Women: 1553–1714
(3-0-3)
The purpose of this course is to understand how
such categories as “women” and “mothers” are constructed within particular historical circumstances.
Tudor and Stuart history, in all its aspects, will be
considered from the viewpoint of women. Topics
will include monarchy and revolution, orthodox
religion and radicalism, health and sickness, the
household and crime.
ANTH 30006. Race and Ethnicity in America
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on race and ethnic relations in
the United States. Readings and materials will present three approaches to the study of majority-minority group relations, the emergence and maintenance
of group dominance, and minority-group adaptations to modes of dominance, including separation,
accommodation, acculturation, and assimilation.
ANTH 30012. Modern Mexico
(3-0-3)
This course examines the complex nation that is
Mexico in the 20th century, its challenges, and its
prospects. Focusing primarily on the period since
1870, we will study the social, economic, political,
and cultural forces that have shaped the history of
the United States’ southern neighbor.
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ANTH 30014. Social Movements
(3-0-3) Summers-Effler
How is social change possible? This is one of the
central questions for the study of social movements,
as well as the organizing theme of this course. In this
course, we will consider the ways in which different
sociological theories of social movements have asked
and answered this question, playing particular attention to theories of identity, emotion, and networks.
ANTH 30020. History of Brazil
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the history of Brazil, Latin
America’s largest nation, from its pre-Columbian
roots to the present, with particular emphasis on
social, economic, and political developments during
that time. Topics will include indigenous people,
the formation of colonial societies and economies,
independence, slavery, abolition and postemancipation society, immigration, the emergence of populist
politics, industrialization and efforts to develop the
Amazon, military rule, and democratization.
ANTH 30027. Historical Memories and the
Developments Bridging Latino and Latin
American Identities
(3-0-3)
This course introduces students to the political processes affecting the development and transformation
of Latin identities in the Americas.
ANTH 30040. Pre-Modern China
(3-0-3)
This course will provide a general survey of Chinese
history from the Shang Dynasty (1766–1027 BC) to
AD 1600. Besides highlighting the major developments of each dynasty, the course will devote special
attention to the Confucian and Legalist underpinnings of the Chinese empire, the influence of Buddhism on Chinese society, the emergence of gentry
culture and the civil service examination system,
and the phenomenon of “barbarian” conquest and
cultural interaction.
ANTH 30041. History of Chinese Medicine
(3-0-3)
In light of the contemporary currency of certain
Chinese practices in the field of alternative medicine,
this course will explore the phenomenon of Chinese
traditional medicine in both its historical and contemporary settings.
ANTH 30050. Holy Fools in Christian Tradition
(3-0-3)
Through the analysis of a variety of texts ranging
from the New Testament books to hagiographies
and philosophical treatises, we will examine different
forms of holy foolishness in spiritual and cultural
traditions of Eastern and Western Christianity and
establish their cultural bearings. Concepts under
discussion will include asceticism, sanctity, heresy,
canonization, and hagiography.
ANTH 30060. Witchcraft and Occult 1400–
1700
(3-0-3)
This course will examine texts from the High Renaissance to the early Enlightenment to see what
contemporaries made of witchcraft, and studies by a
wide range of historians who have used anthropology, psychology and gender studies in an attempt to
explain the phenomenon. Attention will also be paid
to learned magic, alchemy and astrology in order to
provide contrast and context for early modern beliefs
about the occult.
ANTH 30066. Problems in Latin American
Society
(3-0-3)
Since the fall of dictatorships in the 1980s, a multitude of new social organizations has emerged in
Latin America. At the same time, globalization has
presented new challenges to social groups struggling
to retain their livelihoods and their communities.
This course examines traditional and new social
movements, organizations, and institutions in contemporary Latin America.
ANTH 30072. Religion and Social Life
(3-0-3) Christiano
How does social life influence religion? How does
religion influence society? What is religion’s social significance in a complex society like ours? Is
religion’s significance declining? This course will
consider these and other questions by exploring the
great variety in social expressions of religion. The
course examines the social bases of churches, sects,
and cults, and it focuses on contemporary religion in
the United States.
ANTH 30075. Polish Americans
(3-0-3)
A study of the cultural and racial pluralism of American society through the focus of the Polish-American
experience; a review of the social and historical background, the immigration experience, and adaptation
to the American experiment in terms of family, religion, education, work, and government.
ANTH 30078. Migration, Race, and Ethnicity in
Twenty-First-Century America
(3-0-3)
This course is an introduction to these US populations of whites, blacks or African Americans, Native
Americans or Alaskan Natives, Native Hawaiians or
other Pacific Islanders, and Latinos or Hispanics as
to historical context, social, and economic characteristics, and current research and policy issues.
ANTH 30081. Chinese Ways of Thought
(3-0-3)
This is a special topics class on religion, philosophy,
and the intellectual history of China that introduces
the student to the world view and life experience
of the Chinese as they have been drawn from local
traditions, as well as worship and sacrifice to heroes,
and the cult of the dead. Through a close reading of
primary texts in translation, it also surveys China’s
grand philosophical legacy of Daoism, Buddhism,
“Confucianism,” and “Neo-Confucianism” and the
later religious accommodation of Christianity and
Islam.
ANTH 30082. Popular Religion and Philosophy
in China
(3-0-3)
This lecture/discussion course will introduce the
student to the plural religious traditions of the
Chinese as manifested in ancestor worship, sacrifice,
exorcism, and spirit possession. From an understanding of these practices, the course will offer insight
into the mantic foundations of Chinese philosophy,
especially metaphysics. Readings will consist of texts
in translation of popular cults, as well as scholarly
interpretations of these phenomena.
ANTH 30083. Chinese Mosaic: Philosophy,
Politics, Religion
(3-0-3)
This is a special topics class that provides an introduction to the diverse lifeways constituting the
puzzle of the Chinese people. The course will chart
this terrain of current Chinese imagination as it has
been shaped from the contending, and often contentious, influences of religion, philosophy, and politics,
introducing students to the heralded works of the
Chinese intellectual tradition while requiring critical engagement with the philosophic and religious
traditions animating this culture. Thus, as they learn
about China, students also will reflect on how Chinese and Westerners have interpreted it.
ANTH 30086. City in Modern Chinese Fiction
(3-0-3)
Examining portrayals of cities such as Beijing and
Shanghai in fictional works, this course explores
the image of the city as the big, the bad, and the irresistible site of desire for modernity in 20th-century
China.
ANTH 30088. Antisocial Behavior in Modern
Chinese Fiction
(3-0-3)
In this course, we will read fictional works depicting
behaviors and attitudes that are considered by society
in general as antisocial, anticonventional, and sometimes anti-Party. We will investigate the contexts of
these behaviors and their political implications.
ANTH 30089. Cultural Performance in
Contemporary China
(3-0-3)
This course asks students to engage and analyze
different types of “cultural performances” in China
from the 1980s to the present day, including film,
television, theater, advertising, the Internet, and
popular music, dance and leisure activities. No prior
knowledge of Chinese language, culture, or history
is required.
ANTH 30091. Short Story in East Asia and the
Asian Diasporas
(3-0-3)
This course introduces students to short stories by
20th-century writers in China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan,
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and the East Asian diasporas. The goals of the course
are to examine the intertwined modern histories of
East Asian nation-states, investigate the short story
as a literary genre, and explore critical concepts of
literary and cultural identity studies. Ultimately, this
course will provide students with the conceptual
framework and vocabulary to interrogate gender,
race, and nationality as socially constructed categories. All readings are in English; no prior knowledge
of Asia is presumed.
ANTH 30096. Japanese Film and Fiction
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on how some of Japan’s most
creative authors and film directors have responded
to debates relating to the strategies and sacrifices
involved in enacting sweeping social changes, and to
developing a modern, educated citizenry that would
include not only elite males, but women, the poor,
and ethnic or other minorities. Students will be
introduced to the concepts of authorial empathy and
tension between realism and fabrication in fiction
writing and filmic expressions; and to ways in which
gender, nationality, and other affiliations have been
constructed in the Japanese cultural imagery.
ANTH 30194. Infancy: Evolution, History, and
Development
(3-0-3) McKenna
This course explores aspects of infant biology and
socio-emotional development in relationship to
Western child care practices and parenting. Western
pediatric approaches to infancy and parenting are
evaluated in light of Western cultural history and
cross-cultural, human evolutionary, and developmental data. A variety of mammals are included as a
comparative background to explore the relationships
between infant physiology, mental and physical
health, and contemporary infant care-giving
concepts.
ANTH 30210. Health, Healing, and Culture
(3-0-3) Lende
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
After introducing the student to the discipline of
medical anthropology, this course focuses on the
interaction between disease and culture and on the
characteristics and functions of diverse medical
systems.
ANTH 30254. Cultural Aspects of Clinical
Medicine
(3-0-3) Rowan, Sheridan
This course deals with human evolution in both
biological and cultural terms. Topics covered will
include primate behavior, the mechanisms of evolution, the fossil record and the characteristics of
prehistoric cultures.
(4-0-4)
This course examines popular medical concepts and
expectations patients bring with them to the clinical
or hospital setting, as well as the attitudes, organization, and goals of the clinical medical care. Students
divide their time between classroom and service as
patient/family liaisons in an area emergency room.
Student access to a car is necessary.
ANTH 30102. Fundamentals of Archaeology
ANTH 30320. Native Peoples of North America
ANTH 30101. Fundamentals of Human
Evolution
(3-0-3) Chesson
This course is an introduction to the methods,
goals, and theoretical concepts of archaeology, with
a primary focus on that practiced in the Middle
East, North America, Central America, Europe, and
Africa.
ANTH 30103. Fundamentals of Social and
Cultural Anthropology
(3-0-3) McDougall, Nordstrom
This course addresses the question of how and why
cultures differ, the relationship between environment
and culture, and how humans use culture to solve
common problems. Students examine the cultural
nature of language, personality, religion, economics,
politics, family and kinship, play, and even deviant
behavior.
ANTH 30104. Fundamentals of Linguistic
Anthropology
(3-0-3)
An inquiry into the origins of language, the nature of
meaning, the power of language, and how language
systems are acquired and variously function in culture and society.
(3-0-3) Mack
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course offers a survey of the major groups with
an emphasis on their forms of social organization,
their political and economic patterns, their technological, religious, and artistic realms. Beginning with
archaeological and linguistic evidence that traces
the process by which the American Indians came to
occupy the continent, the presentation of material
will then follow the classical “culture area” paradigm.
This overview recognizes a set of 11 basic divisions
such as Eastern Woodlands, the Great Plains, and
the Northwest Coast.
ANTH 30330. Religion, Myth, and Magic
(3-0-3)
The study of religious beliefs and practices in tribal
and peasant societies emphasizing myths, ritual,
symbolism, and magic as ways of explaining man’s
place in the universe. Concepts of purity and pollution, the sacred and the profane, and types of ritual
specialists and their relation to social structure will
also be examined.
ANTH 30345. Food and Culture
(3-0-3)
This course examines the many roles of food played
in a variety of cultures. We consider food choices
and taboos, religious and symbolic meanings of
food, dining and social interactions, obesity and
thinness, and the political and industrial issues of
fast food and the slow food movement. There will be
practical and field studies associated with the course.
Materials fee $30.
ANTH 30350. African Diaspora in the Americas
(3-0-3) Busdiecker
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course will introduce students to black populations in different parts of Latin America and the
Caribbean, focusing on Haiti, Mexico, Brazil, and
Bolivia. Will cover history, social context, and
culture of the particular populations; theory of
blackness; and social and political activism of black
populations. Using comparisons, will examine race,
ethnicity, culture, nation, and diaspora as concepts
and as salient experiences.
ANTH 30359. Peoples of Africa
(3-0-3) Bellis
An introduction to the societies of Sub-Saharan
Africa. It examines cultures in present-day Africa as
well as in the past in order to lend an understanding to the developmental processes that led to their
modern forms, emphasizing the relation between a
culture and its physical environment.
ANTH 30365. The Contemporary Middle East
(3-0-3)
Surveys Islamic civilization, the most important
cultural influence in the Middle East, as context for
discussion of the life of Middle Eastern peoples. Topics include the foundations of Islam, Muslim ethics,
Sunni-Shi’a split, religious pilgrimage, ethnicity,
ecological adaptations, religious brotherhoods and
sisterhoods, Sufism, and concepts of the state.
ANTH 30370. Caribbean Diasporas
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course explores the transnational orientations and the multidimensional consequences of
movement from the Caribbean as it affects sites
in Miami, London, Paris, or Brooklyn as well as
Havana, Jamaica, Haiti, or Belize. Reading works of
ethnography, fiction, and history; questions about
the construction and reconstruction of family bonds;
community identity; religion; political power; and
economic relations will be treated in the domestic
and the global context.
ANTH 30371. Caribbean Fiction
(1-0-1)
Caribbean writers are masters of sonority, eloquence,
and irony. Their vivid, musical prose sings with
Creole orality. Their bitter imagery simmers with
the violence and struggle for freedom that define
Caribbean colonial history. In this course wee listen
to diverse voices of male and female writers, of those
at home in Barbados, Antigua, Trinidad, Martinique,
Haiti, Cuba, and Puerto Rico and those in diaspora.
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ANTH 30375. Culture and Conflict in the
Pacific
(3-0-3) McDougall
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Diverse cultures of the Pacific are examined in historical perspective, analyzing contemporary conflicts
of military coups, crises of law and order, struggles
for land rights, battles over nuclear testing, indigenous rights, relations between indigenous people
and migrants, and the role of outside powers in
Pacific Island states.
ANTH 30382. Anthropology of Gender
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course introduces students to the main issues
and debates characterizing the anthropology of gender and explores how anthropologists have attempted
to understand changing roles, sexual asymmetry, and
stratification.
ANTH 30570. Engendering Archaeology
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course will consider the historical and theoretical foundations of creating an engendered past, the
methodological and practical aspects of “doing”
engendered archaeology, and the intersection between political feminism, archaeological knowledge
production, and the politics of an engendered
archaeology.
ANTH 30580. The Forager/Farmer Transition
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course explores the transition from hunting
and gathering ways of life to agricultural societies
and systems of food production in the Old and
New Worlds and the origins of food production in
diverse areas as a long-term social, conceptual, and
economic process.
ANTH 30590. Prehistory of Eastern North
America
(3-0-3)
This course traces the development of a Native
American culture from its earliest beginnings in
North America to the time of European contact.
Topics include Moundbuilders, agriculture, development of sophisticated societies, and why historic
Native American tribes were so diverse.
ANTH 30591. Prehistory of Western North
America
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Archaeological data and cultural life of prehistoric
Western North America over the last 20,000 years
will be covered. This course emphasizes origins and
cultural development from an early pioneer stage
to the later, sophisticated, diverse cultures of Native
Americans.
ANTH 30592. Prehistory of the American
Southwest
(3-0-3)
This course uses archaeological data and theory to
explore the cultural life of prehistoric Southwest
Americans over the last 12,000 years. The course
emphasizes origins and cultural development from
an early pioneer stage to the later, sophisticated and
diverse cultures of the American Southwest. Students
will explore cultural change, land-use patterns, economics, and political complexity, using information
on environmental relationships, technology, and
other aspects of material culture.
ANTH 35106. Primate Behavior
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course will explore the similarities and differences in behavior among primates. Aspects of
primate social interaction—mother/infant bonds,
male/female interactions, dominance hierarchies,
communication, reproductive strategies, and aberrant behaviors—will be explored in light of their
relationship to human origins.
ANTH 35331. Creole Language and Culture
(3-0-3)
This course introduces students to the vivid, sonorous language of Kreyol, or Haitian Creole, and to
the fascinating culture of its speakers. This intensive,
beginning-level course is intended for students with
no knowledge of Haitian Creole.
ANTH 35582. Archaeology of Ireland
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course examines the cultural and historical
trajectory of the archaeology of Ireland from the
Neolithic through the Viking period. Topics include
the emergence of the unique systems of communities, the development of systems of metallurgy in the
Iron Age, regionalism, monetary practices and ritual,
and discussion of village life in ring forts during the
Bronze Age. Three weeks of practical instruction in
the methods and theory of archaeological survey,
excavation, and laboratory analysis. Students learn
field techniques and apply them to investigations of
both prehistoric and historic archaeological materials
by working with artifacts collected during the field
course. In addition to the basic archaeological techniques the class will introduce modern remote sensing methods, including lessons on how to use a total
station (laser transit) and equipment for magnetic
and resistivity surveys. Student teams will learn how
to operate the geophysical survey instruments and
will use the instruments to conduct geomagnetic and
soil resistivity surveys of a portion of the archaeological features present, and the field school excavations
will be designed to evaluate their theories. There are
no prerequisites for this course, but prior exposure to
an introductory course in anthropology or archaeology is helpful. In addition to tuition, this course
requires payment of $185 laboratory/transportation
fee.
ANTH 35588. Archaeology Field School
(3-0-3)
Three weeks of practical instruction in the methods
and theory of archaeological survey, excavation and
laboratory analysis. Students learn field techniques
and apply them to investigations of both prehistoric
and historic archaeological materials by working
with artifacts collected during the field course. In
addition to the basic archaeological techniques the
class will introduce modern remote sensing methods,
including lessons on how to use a total station (laser
transit) and equipment for magnetic and resistivity
surveys. Student teams will learn how to operate
the geophysical survey instruments and will use
the instruments to conduct geomagnetic and soil
resistivity surveys of a portion of the archaeological
features present, and the field school excavations will
be designed to evaluate their theories. There are no
prerequisites for this course, but prior exposure to an
introductory course in anthropology or archaeology
is helpful. In addition to tuition, this course requires
payment of a laboratory/transportation fee.
ANTH 40000. Ideology and Politics/Latin
America
(3-0-3)
Ideological discourse shapes political action in Latin
America. Thinkers such as Marti, Mariategui, Haya
de la Torre, Lombardo Toledano, Mella, Recabarren,
Prebish, Medina Echavarria, Germani, Cardoso, and
others, and their discourses—nationalism, revolutionary nationalism, Latin-American Marxism, developmentalism, modernization theory, dependency
theory, and democratization.
ANTH 40003. Social Demography of the US
Latino Population
(2-0-2)
This course is an introduction to the social demography of Latino or Hispanic populations in the United
States as to historical background, sociological fields,
and current statistics and studies.
ANTH 40004. International Migration: Mexico
and the United States II
(2-0-2)
A three-week course that refers to a review of basic
questions on international migration, with emphasis on immigration to the United States and the
methods through which these questions have been
adequately or inadequately answered. The numbers,
impact, nature, structure, process, and human experience will be discussed in terms of the research
methods commonly used to approach them.
ANTH 40011. Legacy of Exile: Cubans in the
US
(3-0-3)
This class deals with one of the most visible and
political of all US immigrant groups: Cubans. The
theme of the class is that the Cuban presence has
been shaped by the experience of exile. In understanding the case of the Cuban immigration to the
United States, the students will gain insight into the
dynamics of US immigration policy, the differences
between immigrants and exiles, inter-ethnic relations
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among newcomers and established residents, and the
economic development of immigrant communities.
ANTH 40013. Understanding Story: Conflict,
Culture, Identity
(3-0-3)
The purpose of this seminar-style course is to investigate the shape, purposes and multiple meanings of
narratives both in the lives of individuals and within
institutions and cultures.
ANTH 40031. Psychology and Medicine
(3-0-3)
The course covers a range of topics dealing with
health issues related to different stages of human development (childhood, adolescence, and adulthood),
disabled populations, culture and gender, stress,
physician-patient interactions, death and dying, professional ethics, and social policies relating to health
care. The course is primarily intended for students
intending to enter medical school.
ANTH 40015. Gender, Politics, and
Evolutionary Psychology
ANTH 40040. Cross-Cultural Psychology
(3-0-3)
An examination of ethical/political models of gender-neutral access to public and domestic requisites
for the development of basic human capabilities, and
a comparison of these models with current studies
of the significance of human sexual dimorphism in
evolutionary psychology.
(3-0-3)
The goals of this course are to learn to recognize and
appreciate culture in ourselves and others; to examine the different ways that cultural and racial socialization influence behavior, to consider how culture
and race relate to various psychological constructs,
and to understand the ways in which racism and
ethnocentrism operates in everyday life.
ANTH 40017. Children-Poverty:
Developmental Implication
ANTH 40043. Deviant Behavior
(3-0-3)
Examines the impact of rising levels of child poverty
and related concerns from the perspective of developmental and social psychology.
ANTH 40020. Child Development and Family
Conflict
(3-0-3)
Current trends and findings pertaining to constructive and destructive conflict within families, and
the effects of conflicts within families on children,
will be considered. A focus will be on interrelations
between family systems (marital, parent-child, and
sibling), and methodologies for studying these
questions.
(3-0-3)
This course examines the sociological conceptions
and theories of deviance. Deviance is differentiated
from those phenomena designated as social problems
and social disorganization. The remainder of the
course focuses on deviant acts and deviants. Various
theories or models of delinquency, crime, suicide, sex
deviation, and drug use are used to aid in constructing a sociological understanding of deviance, the
analysis of deviant acts, and the formation of deviant
careers or roles.
ANTH 40058. Comparing European Societies
(3-0-3) Chrobot
A study of the ethnic and racial formation of American society and cultural pluralism; a review of the
theory and history of ethnicity, its policy implications for family, education, economics, religion, government, and international relations; and in-depth
study of one ethnic group of choice.
(3-0-3)
This course offers students a review of major patterns
of difference, along with some similarities, among
the 15 member-states of the European Union. Despite the larger contrasts with the United States, and
the pressures toward convergence generated by the
process of European integration, European societies
remain remarkably different from one another on a
number of dimensions. The role of institutions, cultures, national histories, and policies in accounting
for this pattern of difference will be reviewed.
ANTH 40028. Social Ties, Social Networks,
Social Capital
ANTH 40061. History, Politics, and Society of
Chile
ANTH 40025. Ethnicity in America
(3-0-3)
This course examines three fundamental and interrelated sociological concepts, each of which offers us
an approach to the study of social connections and
their impact on the human experience. Social ties,
social networks, and social capital overlap substantially in their scholarly usage but the concepts are far
from identical.
ANTH 40030. Mental Health and Aging
(3-0-3)
This course provides an introduction to mental
health issues relevant to an older population. Although the primary focus will be on psychopathology and potential therapeutic interventions, the
course will also overview the positive aspects of
functioning in later life (successful aging).
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the formation and development
of Chilean National Society. The course begins by
examining the colonial period and the struggle for
independence. It then focuses on 19th- and 20thcentury issues.
ANTH 40062. Aesthetics of Latino Culture
(3-0-3)
This course analyzes the philosophy and principles
underlying the social and political aspects of Latino
art.
ANTH 40065. Religion in Post-War America
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the major developments in
religious life in the United States since the 1950s
through an in-depth examination of several of the
most important recent books on the subject, such
as: Wade Clark Roof ’s Spiritual Marketplace, Tom
Beaudoin’s Virtual Faith, Christian Smith’s American
Evangelicalism, and Helen Berger’s A Community of
Witches.
ANTH 40069. Religion and Power in Latin
America
(3-0-3)
The course will describe the changing condition
of the Catholic Church in Latin America and the
new situation of religious pluralism produced by
the growing presence of evangelical groups and
Pentecostalism. It will look at the impact of religion
in the empowerment of people from below, and its
relation to new social movements as well as to the
institutionalization of power at the state level in the
new context of globalization.
ANTH 40073. Latinos in American Society
(3-0-3)
This seminar will focus on the breakdown of the
Spanish empire in Latin America and the emergence
of new nation-states in the region in the first quarter
of the 19th century. This seminar will examine the
origins and actors of the independence movements,
the development of an ideology of emancipation,
and the variegated causes of fragmentation.
ANTH 40075. Moving New Directions: African
Diaspora
(3-0-3)
Migration and the emergence of new identities have
defined the formation and evolution of the African
diaspora in the modern era. This course is designed
to introduce students of African-American studies
to the concept of African diaspora and to provide a
framework for understanding how it has changed
over time.
ANTH 40079. International Migration and
Human Rights
(3-0-3) Bustamante
A wide coverage of international migration experiences in the world with an emphasis on human
rights. It starts with a historical approach to various
immigration waves to the United States. It focuses
on the current debate on the impact of the undocumented immigration from Mexico and Central
America and the differences between Mexico and
the United States’ migration policies, and their social
and economic implications.
ANTH 40080. Qualitative Methodology
(3-0-3)
This seminar will cover the general topic of qualitative methodology, with particular attention to
ethnography and field work, visual methods, archival
research, and related strategies. Heavy emphasis will
be placed on cross cultural research in minority communities in the United States.
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ANTH 40082. Latino Image in American Films
(3-0-3)
This course traces the historical depiction of Chicanos, Mexicanos, Puerto Ricans, Cubans, and other
Latinos in Hollywood-made movies. Cinematic
plots, roles, and motifs—from the earliest of silent
films through the onset of the 1980s—are examined
to explore the changing physical, social, and cultural
definitions of Latinos and other ethnic minority
groups in the United States.
ANTH 40083. Social Demography of US
Minorities
(3-0-3)
This course will focus on the demographic status of
ethnic minorities in the United States. Some of the
major topics include population size and projections,
geographical distribution, and residential patterns.
Other issues are educational attainment, occupational status, and personal and family income. The
course will cover the basics of demographic methods
and techniques.
ANTH 40250. Anthropology of Reproduction
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course examines how societies throughout the
globe view and manage reproductive processes. The
emphasis will be primarily, though not exclusively,
on women’s reproductive health throughout the life
cycle, including puberty, pregnancy, family planning,
childbirth, and menopause.
ANTH 40260. Asia: Culture, Health, and Aging
(3-0-3)
With a focus on Asian case studies (Japan, Korea,
China, Taiwan, and India), this seminar provides an
introduction to both cultural gerontology and critical medical anthropology.
ANTH 40303. Anthropology of Art
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course will examine art as a functional part
of culture from an anthropological point of view.
Attention is given to evolution of art as part of human culture and to evolution of the study of art by
anthropologists. Open to graduate students.
ANTH 40311. Topics in Social/Cultural
Anthropology
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course explores the latest developments in social-cultural anthropology including, but not limited
to, nationalism and transnationalism; colonialism
and post-colonialism; political-economy; gender;
religion; ethnicity; language; and medicine and the
body. Emphasis will be on social and cultural transformations in specific historical contexts.
ANTH 40312. Topics in Asian Anthropology
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course explores the latest developments in
the anthropology of Asian societies and cultures. The
course may include the study of nationalism and
transnationalism; colonialism and postcolonialism; political-economy; gender; religion;
ethnicity; language; and medicine and the body. Emphasis will be on social and cultural transformations
of Asian societies in specific historical contexts.
ANTH 40319. Multiculturalism
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course explores the economic, state, and national conditions of multiculturalism as a social relation
and semiotic form. Seminal questions include the
issues of difference deployed in debates over multiculturalism and anthropology’s location in them as a
study of human diversity.
ANTH 40321. Religious Life in Asian Cultures
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course examines diverse religious expressions
and lives of contemporary Asian peoples from an
anthropological perspective. This course explores
topics such as ritual, ancestor worship, shamanism,
spirit possession, divination, and festivals in changing Asian societies, including Japan, Korea, China,
Malaysia, and India.
ANTH 40333. Gender and Violence
(3-0-3) Mahmood
This upper-level anthropology course focuses on
the problematic intersection between gender and
violence. The question of male aggression and female
pacifism is explored, with attention to female fighters and male practitioners of nonviolence. Women
in circumstances of war, trauma, and healing are
studied for the insight such study may provide for
peace-building initiatives. Gender in the military,
gender and violence, ritual cross-culturally, and rape
as a sociopolitical phenomenon are among the other
topics considered. Primary source readings complement intensive class discussion; substantial writing
and speaking buttress academic skills.
ANTH 40336. Gender and Power in Asian
Cultures
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This class studies the representations of women and
men in different Asian societies and in different
political, social, and economic contexts, and their effect on kinship, family, work, religion, and the state.
Ethnographic studies will cover Japan, Korea, China,
Malaysia, Indonesia, and India.
ANTH 40340. Native Americans in Fact and
Fiction
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course focuses on our images of Native Americans and how popular and scientific writing and
film may have shaped these images. The course uses
books and film displaying Native American stereotypes and compares them to ethnographic studies
that reveal more realistically the diversity of Native
American culture.
ANTH 40355. Race, Ethnicity, and Power
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Presents a review and discussion of social scientific
research concerning the nature of race and ethnicity
and their expression as social and cultural forces in
the organization of multiethnic societies. The focus
is multidisciplinary.
ANTH 40400. Perspectives in Anthropological
Analysis
(3-0-3) Blum Downey
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
The material to be covered in this course includes
the seminal contributions to American and European anthropological thought as these emerged in
approximate chronological order. Ideas about the
place of human beings in nature, the uniqueness of
the human condition, and the evolution of all nature
dominated the intellectual ferment that gave rise
to anthropology. This initial stage was followed by
varied reactions to and revisions of the evolutionary scheme, including controversy over the culture
concept and the inception of theoretical schools such
as functionalism, historicism, materialism, and structuralism, as well as the advancement of systematic
field research, the primary tool in anthropological
study.
ANTH 45308. Native North American Art
(3-0-3)
Traditional Native North American art will be studied through form, technique, and context, as well
as the perception of this art as exemplified through
changing content, technique, and context. Students
will work with the collections in the Snite Museum
of Art.
ANTH 45337. Film and Society: Americana
(3-0-3)
This course will examine the “American experience”
via cinematic representation and analysis. It will
center on the work of American directors whose
films skirt the periphery of the mainstream and focus
on American culture. Students will contextualize the
films via a reader packet drawing on articles from
anthropology, film studies, basic film production and
culture theory. Course work will include research
papers and the production of a short visual narrative
piece representing students’ conceptualizations of
Americana.
ANTH 45390. Ethnographic Method and
Writing for Change
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
The notion that a written text can itself be a “site
of resistance,” a location where political commitment and rigorous scholarship intersect, undergirds
this course on ethnographic method. We study
the construction and interpretation of field notes,
subjectivity and objectivity in research, ethical issues
in fieldwork, feminist and postcolonial critiques
of ethnographic practice, “voice” and oral history,
and aspects of ethnographic inquiry that impact on
change processes.
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ANTH 45500. Theory and Method in
Archaeology
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
The practice of archaeological research will be covered, from the various methods of identifying sites
in the field, to excavation procedures, to analysis
of material in the laboratory. Useful to individuals
in anthropology, history, theology, classics, and art
history.
ANTH 45817. Human Osteology
(3-1-4)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This is a lab-intensive course that explores the
methods used in physical anthropology for studying
individual human skeletal remains, as well as those
employed to establish biocultural connections at
the population level. Forensic techniques utilized in
individual identification will be developed in the first
third of the course.
ANTH 45818. Research in Biocultural
Anthropology
(6-0-6)
Prerequisite(s): ANTH 30101 or ANTH 329 or
ANTH 329A
The field school will engage students in an experiential learning environment that immerses them in
anthropological method and theory. Using the large
Byzantine St. Stephen’s skeletal collection as the cornerstone, historical and archaeological information
will be synthesized in a biocultural reconstruction of
ancient monastic life. Students will conduct original
research and participate in a lecture program delivered by top scholars in the fields of biological anthropology, classics, and Near Eastern studies.
ANTH 45830. Documentary: Critical Analysis
and Method
(3-1-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
We see documentaries in many different forms every
day via journalism, reality television, the Discovery
channel, and non fiction film. This course turns a
critical, anthropological, and methodological eye toward interpreting, constructing, and contextualizing
the documentary.
ANTH 45832. Anthropology of War and Peace
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This class will explore the human capacity for war
and for peace. The course will explore the many
forms of war, from tribal conflicts through guerrilla
warfare to conventional and nuclear war. It will also
study societies without war, the place of war and
peace in human society, whether violence is inherent
in human nature or learned, and what the future of
war and peace is likely to be on our planet.
ANTH 45833. Global Crime and Corruption
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This class will look at what constitutes the illegal
today; who is engaged in crime and corruption; and
what kinds of economic, political, and social powers
they wield. It will also look at the societies and cultures of “out-laws.”
ANTH 45839. Mexican Transnationalism in
South Bend
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course uses experiential learning in the Mexican
community of South Bend in order to understand
how Mexican migrants conduct their lives across
the vast distances separating South Bend and their
homeland.
ANTH 45842. Doing Things with Words
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course looks at some of the ways humans do
things with words. Topics include religious language;
silence; politeness and sincerity; truth, deception,
lying, and cheating; linguistic variety, identity, and
stereotypes; moral evaluations made of language; and
language used for power and solidarity.
ANTH 45854. Museum Anthropology: An
Introduction
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An introduction to the history, philosophy, and
professional practices of museums. It includes an
examination of the ethical and practical issues of
museum work through readings, discussions, and
hands-on experience.
ANTH 45855. Archaeology and Material
Culture
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This will be an archaeology lab class that will provide
an activity-based setting to explore the meanings
and interpretations of archaeological artifacts. It will
provide an in-depth introduction to basic laboratory
methods for the organization, curation, and analysis
of artifacts such as pottery, stone tools, metals, soil
samples, and floral and faunal remains. Lab exercises
will introduce course concepts that students will
use to analyze a small collection of artifacts from an
archaeological site.
ANTH 45856. Pottery in Archaeology
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
In many archaeological sites, pottery is the most
common type of artifact recovered. The analysis and
interpretation of ceramic remains allow archaeologists to accomplish several goals: establish a chronological sequence, track interaction between different
areas, and suggest what types of activities people may
have conducted at the site. This course will focus on
the ways that archaeologists bridge the gap between
the analysis and the interpretation of ceramic data.
ANTH 45857. Archaeological Materials
Analysis: Lithic Technology
(4-0-4)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course will cover laboratory procedures and
techniques used in the analysis of a range of excavated chipped stone artifacts from prehistoric contexts.
Students will participate in flintknapping practice
and work intensively with several archaeological collections.
ANTH 45858. Archaeological Field School
(6-0-6)
Six weeks of practical instruction in the methods
and theory of archaeological survey, excavation, and
laboratory analysis. Students learn field techniques
and apply them to investigations of both prehistoric
and historic archaeological materials by working with
artifacts collected during the field course.
There are no prerequisites for this course, but prior
exposure to an introductory course in anthropology
or archaeology is helpful.
ANTH 46100. Directed Readings in Biological
Anthropology
(V-0-V)
Intensive independent readings on a special problem
area in biological anthropology about which the
student will be expected to produce a detailed annotated bibliography and write a scholarly paper.
ANTH 46110. Directed Readings in
Bioarchaeology
(V-0-V)
Intensive independent readings on a special problem
area in biological anthropology and/or archaeology
about which the student will be expected to produce
a detailed annotated bibliography and write a scholarly paper.
ANTH 46300. Directed Readings in
Sociocultural Anthropology
(V-0-V)
Intensive independent readings on a special problem
area in socio-cultural anthropology about which the
student will be expected to produce a detailed annotated bibliography and write a scholarly paper.
ANTH 46500. Directed Readings in
Archaeology
(V-0-V)
Intensive independent readings on a special problem
area in archaeology about which the student will be
expected to produce a detailed annotated bibliography and write a scholarly paper.
ANTH 47114. Topics in Biological Anthropology
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course explores the latest developments in
biological anthropology, including but not limited
to population genetics, human diversity, the concept
of race, primate evolution and behavior, patterns of
adaptation, and evolutionary medicine.
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anthropology
ANTH 47136. Human Diversity
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course presents the methods used by physical
anthropologists to study both the biological basis of
human differences (race, intelligence, sex, gender,
etc.)and the ongoing process of human adaptation
and evolution in response to climate, nutrition, and
disease.
ANTH 47150. Advanced Perspectives on
Human Evolution
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course takes an in-depth integrative approach
to issues in human evolution. Focal points of discussion will include; in-depth analyses of fossil homonin
species and their ecologies, a detailed assessment of
nonhuman primate behavior as used in modeling the
patterns and contexts of human behavior, a review
and analysis of current debate surrounding the origin
of modern humans, and current topics in the field of
human evolution and paleoanthropological theory.
ANTH 47252. Evolutionary Medicine
(3-0-3)
This course will reconceptualize a variety of human
diseases, syndromes and disorders from the standpoint of evolution, in the modern cultural context.
The evolution of infectious diseases, menopause,
women’s reproductive cancers, allergy, pediatric
topics, breastfeeding, obstetrics, geriatric medicine,
structural and genetic abnormalities, psychiatric
disorders, psychological health, eating disorders, nutrition, obesity, myopia, emotional disorders, touch
therapy and massage will be examined.
ANTH 47314. Transnational Societies and
Cultures
(3-0-3)
This course analyzes how cultural identities and behaviors are formed in the context of global systems.
Through specific case studies, students will explore
how different social groups construct their cultures
in interaction with other cultures and how, in so doing, these groups are both responding to and shaping
global agendas.
ANTH 47320. Person, Self, and Body
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
How is the private self different from the public
person, and how do these contrasts vary in different
societies? How is the body valued, situated, and contested? What are the sources of conflict within a person, between persons, and with the material world?
How is identity constructed from these components?
This course will examine contemporary and classical
theoretical works as well as ethnographic accounts of
persons, selves, and bodies to address these questions.
ANTH 47345. Subversive Culture
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): ANTH 30103 or ANTH 328 or
ANTH 328A
The course will explore anti-structures of society using anthropological perspectives and analyze forms
of creative resistance and social protest in art, performance, literature, and popular culture, using case
studies from various cultures around the world.
ANTH 47350. Cultural Memory
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): ANTH 30103 or ANTH 328 or
ANTH 328A
Looking at examples from around the world through
readings, films, slides, recordings, and other media,
we will consider a variety of strategies humans use to
instill a sense of socially and culturally shared memory, including ritual; performative traditions such as
dance and theater; written and oral histories; art and
literature; media and popular culture; museums and
monuments; science and technology (particularly
archaeology, craft productions, and ecology); and
certain aspects of everyday life, such as food, clothing, jokes, and the transference of knowledge.
ANTH 47377. Cultural Difference and Social
Change
(3-0-3)
This course is designed especially for students returning from summer service projects or study abroad
programs in the developing world. In the class,
students will conduct research to better understand
the sites that they visited during their overseas projects, orienting them in relation to broader global,
regional, and national patterns.
ANTH 47560. Household Archaeology
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course explores the theoretical and methodological challenges faced by archaeologists excavating
ancient households. Students will explore the social,
economic, political, and physical characteristics of
households; the relationship between households and
communities; and the contribution of household
archaeology to architectural, artifactual, and social
analyses of ancient communities.
ANTH 47570. The Archaeology of Death
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course explores the significance of prehistoric
human mortuary behavior, from the first evidence
of deliberate burial by Neanderthals as an indicator
of the evolution of symbolic thought, to the analysis
of the sometimes spectacular burial patterns found
in the complex societies such as ancient Egypt and
Megalithic Europe. Open to graduate students.
ANTH 47580. Environmental Archaeology
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course explores the relationships between past
societies and the ecosystems they inhabited and constructed using concepts from settlement archaeology,
human geography, and paleoecology (the study of
ancient ecosystems).
ANTH 47900. Advanced Seminar
(3-0-3)
This course will provide an opportunity for students
to apply theoretical knowledge and critical thinking
skills that they have acquired in their anthropology
courses, especially ANTH 40400. The course is
designed to be a capstone requirement to the anthropology major. A research paper will be completed by
the end of the course.
ANTH 48100. Directed Research in Biological
Anthropology
(V-0-V)
Intensive independent research on a special problem
area in biological anthropology about which the
student will be expected to produce a detailed annotated bibliography and write a scholarly paper.
ANTH 48110. Directed Research in
Bioarchaeology
(V-0-V)
Intensive independent research on a special problem
area in biological anthropology and/or archaeology
about which the student will be expected to produce
a detailed annotated bibliography and write a scholarly paper.
ANTH 48120. Directed Research Sleep Lab
(V-0-V)
Intensive independent research at the Mother-Baby
Behavioral Sleep Laboratory about which the student
will be expected to produce a detailed annotated
bibliography and write a scholarly paper.
ANTH 48300. Directed Research in Sociocultural Anthropology
(V-0-V)
Intensive independent research on a special problem
area in socio-cultural anthropology about which the
student will be expected to produce a detailed annotated bibliography and write a scholarly paper.
ANTH 48500. Directed Research in
Archaeology
(V-0-V)
Intensive independent research on a special problem
area in archaeology about which the student will be
expected to produce a detailed annotated bibliography and write a scholarly paper.
ANTH 48900. Anthropology Senior Thesis
(V-0-V)
This course, which continues for two semesters, provides the student with the opportunity for independent study and the development of skills in research
and writing. The effort is the student’s own, from
the choosing of a topic to the conclusion presented
in the final paper. A thesis director is chosen to guide
the student and provide assistance.
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art, art history, and design
Art, Art History,
and Design
Chair:
Dennis P. Doordan
Professors:
Austin I. Collins, CSC; Dennis P. Doordan;
William J. Kremer; Kathleen A. Pyne; Charles
M. Rosenberg
Associate Professors:
Charles E. Barber; Robert R. Coleman; Rev.
Jean A. Dibble; Paul A. Down; Rev. James F.
Flanigan, CSC; Richard L. Gray; Martina A.
Lopez; Rev. Martin Lam Nguyen; Robin F.
Rhodes; Maria C. Tomasula
Assistant Professors:
Nyame O. Brown; John K. Caruso; Robert P.
Sedlack
Associate Professional Specialist:
John F. Sherman
Concurrent Assistant Professors:
Douglas E. Bradley; Stephen R. Moriarty
The department. The Department of Art, Art History, and Design at the University of Notre Dame, as
part of the College of Arts and Letters, is dedicated
to the liberal education of the whole person. The art
and design student, guided by an active faculty, can
expect to become critically aware of the rich artistic
past and challenged to become a thoughtful maker
of contemporary visual expression. The art history
student, under the tutelage of an expert faculty, will
achieve a broad and evaluative knowledge of the art
of the Western world. An active lecture and visiting
artist series and the extensive collections of the Snite
Museum of Art strengthen and broaden the work
in the classroom and studio. The South Bend and
Chicago area provide additional cultural activities
and experiences.
The department has 14 visual art and design and
seven art history faculty. The student may pursue
one of three degrees at the undergraduate level: the
bachelor of arts (BA) in studio art and design or a
BA in art history, or the bachelor of fine arts (BFA)
in studio art and design. Studio concentrations are
offered in ceramics, design, painting, photography,
printmaking and sculpture. The size of the department enables the serious student to receive a solid
foundation and, through personal contact with the
faculty, to develop a creative individual direction in
a discipline. The department is further enriched by
an active graduate program offering the MFA degree
in studio art and design and the MA degree in art
history.
The art history classrooms and the art slide library
are housed on the first floor of O’Shaughnessy Hall.
Offices for the art history faculty are in Decio Faculty Hall. The departmental office is in Riley Hall, as
are the art and design faculty studios. Riley Hall also
houses all the visual arts activities in well-equipped
studios that are always available for student use.
Skilled technical staff and support facilities are available as appropriate for each medium that is
offered.
The Studio Art
and Design Major
Bachelor of Arts Degree in Studio Art and Design
The Bachelor of Arts degree program in art and
design is defined as a general liberal arts degree.
The BA degree is ideal for the student who desires
a liberal education with a strong emphasis in art.
Students enrolling in the BA degree program are
required to complete a five-course core curriculum
during their first three semesters. These courses are
Drawing I, 2-D Foundations, 3-D Foundations, one
course treating material from before 1500 taught by
a regular full-time art historian in the department,
and one course that treats material from after 1500
taught by a regular full-time art historian in the department. Students are not required to select a major
concentration for the BA degree, but some focus of
study is encouraged. The BA degree consists of 36
hours in art and design, of which 27 are in studio
and nine in art history.
Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree in Studio Art and
Design
The bachelor of fine arts degree program in art and
design is intended for the student who wishes to pursue a professional career in the visual arts. The program is organized into a four-year sequence of study
that provides a solid understanding of art and art
history. The student has an opportunity to explore
a variety of curricular options and then chooses an
intensive and professional major concentration. In
addition to a primary concentration, BFA students
are encouraged to select a secondary area of interest
to broaden their thinking and to enrich their creative
study. BFA candidates share a close working relationship with the department’s faculty who are active
professional artists and designers. Intensive studio
work is complemented by an academic education
with strong art history and liberal arts component.
The BFA degree consists of 66 credit hours in art, of
which 54 are in studio and 12 in art history.
BFA Freshman and Sophomore Years
Students beginning in the program are required
to complete a seven-course studio core curriculum
during their first two years. Five of these courses are
mandated: Drawing I, Figure Drawing, 2-D Foundations, 3-D Foundations and Photography I. The
remaining two studio courses are optional, based on
the student’s interest. This intensive curriculum establishes a base for the studio practices and principles
for all visual art expression. At the end of the fourth
semester, students who have earned a minimum 3.25
grade point average in their studio courses will be
accepted as candidates for the BFA degree. Students
who do not qualify are eligible for the BA degree.
BFA candidates are waived from the second history/
social science requirement and the University fine
arts requirement.
BFA Junior and Senior Years
Students accepted into the BFA program begin
a two-year primary concentration in one of the
following studio areas: ceramics, design, painting, photography, printmaking, or sculpture. The
concentration requires 15 hours of study in a major
concentration area during the last four semesters.
Teaching in the major is highly individualized and
stresses the creative development and preparation of
the student for the professional world. In addition to
pursuing a concentration, all BFA majors must enroll
in the BFA Seminar and the Senior Thesis Course.
The culmination of the BFA degree is the completion of a senior thesis. This two-semester senior project, directed by a faculty member, will be exhibited
and approved by the faculty as a requirement for
graduation.
Studio Art and Design
Concentrations
Ceramics Concentration
Ceramics is a concentration emphasizing clay as the
primary vehicle for expression. Pottery, vessel making
and sculpture may be addressed through a variety of
processes to include hand-building, throwing and
casting. As students develop technical skill with the
medium, they will create and explore forms and ideas
of their own choosing. Beyond clay, students will
be encouraged to study and utilize other sculptural
media as well as become familiar with contemporary
and historical source material which will inform their
own direction in ceramics.
Design Concentration
Design is the order of form and control of function.
It is what designers do. Because people are conditioned to evaluate and select on the basis of appearance and textural input, the acceptance or rejection
of material goods is often reduced to an object’s
visual power of seduction. The act of giving form,
texture, and color to information and object empowers the designer with influence that can lead to the
success or failure of made aspects of our
environment.
Responsible designers aspire to conceive objects with
a sensitivity for human need, human aspiration, and
the functional requirements for both implementing and producing made objects. At its best, design
serves a community that includes industry, marketing, consumer, and the environment.
Design has been part of the curriculum at the University of Notre Dame since the early 1950s. Here,
design students share the advantages of a campus
that is rich in contemporary technology and still retains a deep appreciation for a heritage of traditional
human values and wisdom. Technically advanced lecture rooms and digital labs support all student design
activities. One 18-station Mac lab and one 10-station SGI lab share campus network with a complete
range of facilities for color or black and white input
and output. Two model fabrication shops allow pattern making activities leading to “on site” processing
that ranges from plastic molding to foundry casting.
Intermediate and advanced level undergraduate
students share an energized design community with
defined studio space located in close proximity to all
studio fine arts, art history, and exhibition galleries.
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art, art history, and design
Graphic Design
Graphic design is a creative process that combines
fine art and technology to communicate ideas. It
begins with a message that, in the hands of a talented
graphic designer, is transformed into visual communication that transcends mere words. By controlling
color, type, movement, symbols, and images, the
graphic designer creates and manages the production
of visuals designed to inform and persuade a specific
audience. By combining aesthetic judgment with
project management skills, graphic designers develop
visual solutions and communications strategies. The
professional designer works with writers, editors, illustrators, photographers, code writers, and printers
to complete compelling designs that communicate a
client’s message effectively.
At Notre Dame, the graphic design education begins
with the liberal arts curriculum as part of the College
of Arts and Letters. This varied background includes
science, math, philosophy and theology, and creates
a well-rounded graduate prepared to deal with the
wide variety of complex communication issues professional designers face.
Within the Department of Art, Art History, and
Design, the graphic design curriculum gives a student the opportunity to be firmly grounded in the
fundamentals of graphic design and gain exposure in
various fine art curriculum. The further the student
progresses through the tiered program, the greater
the opportunities are to explore creative avenues
and problem-solving-as well as problem-definingmethods. These experiences are coupled with access
to leading-edge technology, including an on-site
eighteen-station Mac lab, color input/output devices,
CD burners, digital cameras, and the most current
computer applications recognized by industry.
Industrial Design
Industrial designers give form to virtually all massmanufactured products in our culture. Their tasks
include the conceptual act of planning how made
objects will affect utility, appearance, and value to
users, sellers, and makers. Toward these ends, designers require an awareness of aesthetics, human behavior, human proportion, material, process, and the
responsible appropriation of resources, both before
and after use.
Industrial designers identify and solve problems. The
industrial designer must present different points of
view and alternative solutions involving products
or systems in a clear and engaging manner. This
persuasive art form requires highly developed organizational and presentational methods that utilize
drawing, physical modeling, computer modeling,
and animation as well as verbal skills.
Design education begins at Notre Dame with utilization of campus facilities through the liberal arts curriculum. This social, philosophical, critical, ethical,
and historical experience helps build a foundation
of cultural understanding that naturally leads to
the more specific aspects of traditional creative and
problem-solving methods required of designers. The
industrial design area also maintains close contact
with regional and national corporate design and
consulting offices in the form of annual conferences,
sponsored projects, and internships.
The design faculty at Notre Dame are professionals in their fields. Their diverse experiences, as well
as their commitment to quality design education,
complement an atmosphere for creative learning and
problem solving. The faculty’s range of qualifications
extend into the corporate realm as design managers,
design and manufacturing entrepreneurs, professional design consultants, and experts in digital design
technologies. These credentials present the students
with a rich complement of educational resources
plus a professional base in which to network, both
nationally and internationally.
Painting Concentration
Painting is a traditional visual expression of human
experience that combines the direct manipulation
of materials with an illusion of the world in space.
Paintings can report what the eye sees as well as what
the eye might see; it is fact and fantasy. A painting
can also stimulate and delight the consciousness
with formulations of colored pastes on a flat surface.
The concentration in painting exposes students to
the varied traditions of the medium and encourages
them to explore their own capacity to create. Emphasis is placed on discovering the student’s individual
values and developing techniques that elucidate and
clarify those values.
Photography Concentration
Photographs mediate our experiences with the physical world experiences that take place at the intersection between art, culture and our own individual
perceptions. The concentration in photography is
designed to inform students of photographic traditions while engaging them in issues of contemporary
art practice. The photography program seeks to
facilitate growth and development of the art student
through a full range of courses dealing with technical, historical, critical, and aesthetic concerns. The
goal of the program is to enable students to be conversant with these issues and to recognize the power
of photography as a uniquely flexible medium for
both personal and cultural expression.
Printmaking Concentration
The printmaking concentration emphasizes a manner of thinking and making images that printmaking
techniques allow and encourage. As students become
familiar with the various techniques and technologies
of lithography, intaglio, relief, and silkscreen, they
learn methods of developing images and ideas. Experimentation and exploration of mixed print media
images are encouraged. The courses are designed
to progressively develop skill, creativity, personal
imagery, and knowledge of relevant current issues.
Advanced students are encouraged to work on a professional level by creating a cohesive body of work
and by striving toward exhibiting that work.
Sculpture Concentration
The goal of the sculpture program is to offer students a solid understanding of sculptural materials,
tools, and techniques that will enable them to
expand their ideas into skillful and thoughtful individual expression. Students work in well-equipped
studios under the direction of the sculpture faculty.
A full range of sculptural experiences in traditional
and nontraditional media are available in specific
courses. Independent study, visiting artist lectures,
and visits to area museums and galleries supplement
course offerings. By blending required and elective
courses, students may design a curriculum that will
respond to their particular needs and direction.
Course Descriptions. The following course descriptions give the number and title of each course.
Lecture hours per week, studio hours per week, and
credits each semester are in parentheses. “V” indicates variable.
Art Studio Courses
ARST 11201. Drawing I
(3-0-3)
This course deals with form depiction in its many
aspects and modes and is intended for beginning
students as well as advanced students who need additional experience in drawing. Lab fee.
ARST 11301. Basic Painting
(0-6-3)
Open to all students. This course is an introduction to oil painting techniques and to stretcher and
canvas preparation. The emphasis is on finding a
personal direction. Lab fee.
ARST 11601. 3-D Foundations
(0-6-3)
This required core course for all art majors introduces the student to three-dimensional art by producing
sculptures (both figurative and abstract) in a variety
of media. Contemporary movements in sculpture
are examined through slide lectures and attendance
at visiting artist lectures and visits to exhibitions.
Lab fee.
ARST 21101. Ceramics I
(0-6-3)
Open to all students. This course examines basic
techniques of wheel-thrown and hand-built clay
structures for sculpture and pottery. Lab fee.
ARST 21303. Watercolor I
(0-6-3)
Open to all students. This course is an introduction
to the watercolor medium and deals with a variety
of methods, materials, and techniques (both realistic
and abstract) with special emphasis on color and
composition. Lab fee.
ARST 21401. Photography I
(3-0-3)
This course is an introduction to the tools, materials, and processes of black-and-white photography.
Lectures and demonstrations expose students to both
traditional and contemporary practices in photography. Critiques of ongoing work encourage students
to begin discovering and developing their individual
strengths and interests in the medium. A 35mm
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camera with manual shutter speed and “F” stop is
needed. Lab fee.
ARST 21501. Silkscreen I
(0-6-3)
Open to all students. This course is an introduction to stencil processes and printing. Hand-drawn
and photographic stencil-making techniques are
explored. Mono-printing and discovery of unique
aspects of serigraphy are encouraged. Emphasis is on
exploration of color and development of student’s
ideas and methodologies. Lab fee.
ARST 21503. Etching I and Monoprints
(0-6-3)
Open to all students. This basic studio class introduces techniques of intaglio (etching). Students learn
basic platemaking and printing techniques while
learning to incorporate their own drawing skills and
points of view. Historical and contemporary prints
are reviewed. Emphasis is on development of the
student’s own ideas and methodology. Lab fee.
ARST 21505. Artists’ Books and Papermaking
(0-6-3)
Open to all students. This introductory course
explores the making of artists’ books and papermaking. Students learn basic bookbinding techniques
for books and printing techniques for stationery and
posters. They also learn how to make handmade
papers. Part of the focus is on historical books as
well as on what contemporary artists are doing with
books. Lab fee.
ARST 21507. Relief and Collography
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. This course investigates various
relief methods of printmaking, including linocut,
woodcut, and collograph. Emphasis is on experimentation and combining media. Lab fee.
ARST 21508. Experimental Printing without
the Press
(0-6-3)
This course examines the many ways to make prints
without using a press; from potato prints and relief
to digital transfers. It is designed to introduce the
student to methods of constructing prints ranging
from traditional forms to collage and beyond to
layering media. It is a course that encourages creativity and teaches students to make unique images on
paper. Lab fee.
ARST 21509. Print Business and
Photogravure
(3-0-3)
This course is concerned with learning the business
of the contract printing for photogravure prints.
These prints look exactly like photographs, but are
printed onto soft printmaking papers. The class will
invite a photographer to produce a suite of six blackand-white photographic prints that the class will
convert into photogravure prints. The class will learn
the business of production, including costs, while
engaging in the scheduling, platemaking, printing,
packaging, and sales of a suite of photogravures.
Lab fee.
ARST 21512. Photolithography
(0-6-3)
Photolithography is a method of printmaking utilizing a metal plate that is photosensitive. Hand-drawn
and computer-generated images as well as traditional
photographs are used to create prints that reflect
an individual’s creativity. Emphasis is placed on the
student developing his or her own vision and its
expression. Lab fee.
model building. No previous experience necessary.
Offered fall only. Materials fee TBA.
ARST 31402. Photography II
ARST 21602. Wood Sculpture
(0-6-3)
Open to all students. This course uses wood as a
primary medium. Emphasis is placed on individual
concept and design. Students learn the use of hand
and power tools as well as techniques of joining,
laminating, fabricating, and carving. Lab fee.
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): ARST 21401 or ARST 285 or ARST
285S
This course extends and develops the skills and concepts initiated in Photography I. Students also are
introduced to a variety of photographic possibilities
outside traditional black-and-white printing. Techniques explored include darkroom manipulations,
photo-constructions, Polaroid transfers, installations,
and non-silver processes. Projects encourage students
to continue defining their own areas of interest and
to locate their own concerns within the broad range
of photographic issues. Lab fee.
ARST 21603. Metal Foundry
ARST 31405. Color Photography
(0-6-3)
Open to all students. The course focuses on work in
cast aluminum and cast bronze sculptures. Students
learn basic welding techniques using oxygen and
acetylene, arc and heliarc welding. Mold making,
work in wax, and metal finishing techniques are also
explored. Lab fee.
ARST 21604. Metal Sculpture I
(0-6-3)
Open to all students. Metal is the medium of choice
in this course designed to explore three-dimensional
design with a variety of projects grounded in historical precedents. Students become familiar with as
many metalworking techniques as time and safety
allow, such as gas and arc welding, basic forge work,
and several methods of piercing, cutting and alternative joinery. Lab fee.
ARST 21606. Figure Sculpture
(0-6-3)
Open to all students. This course concentrates on
modeling from the figure. Work is predominantly
in clay, but mold-making and casting techniques are
also explored. Lab fee.
ARST 24340. Chinese Black Ink Painting
(VV-2)
Japan’s traditional painting in Chinese black ink with
brush. Introduces basic methods and forms in portraits, landscapes, birds, and flowers.
ARST 31102. Ceramics II
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): ARST 21101 or ARST 209S or
ARST 210S
This course explores advanced processes in clay for
pottery and sculpture as well as techniques of glazing. Lab fee.
ARST 31315. Scene Design and Techniques
(3-0-3)
This is a beginner’s course in basic scenic design
techniques and hand drafting for the stage. This
course will take the student through the process of
design, from how to read a script, research, presentation, rendering, basic drafting and, if time allows,
(0-6-3)
This course is an introduction to technical and aesthetic issues in color photography with an emphasis
on the development of personal imagery and the history of color picture making. Lab fee.
ARST 31415. Introduction to Film and Video
Production
(4-0-4)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An introductory course in the fundamentals of
shooting, editing, and writing for film and video
productions. This is a hands-on production course
emphasizing aesthetics, creativity, and technical
expertise. The course requires significant amounts of
shooting and editing outside class. Students produce
short video projects using digital video and Super
8mm film cameras and edit digitally on computer
workstations. The principles of three-camera studio
production are also covered.
ARST 41103. Ceramics Studio
(0-6-V)
This advanced course is for students pursuing an
individual direction in ceramics. Emphasis is on
individual concepts and techniques.
ARST 41203. Figure Drawing, Multilevel
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. The emphasis is on drawing
in all its aspects: materials, methods, techniques,
composition, design, and personal expression. The
human figure is the subject matter. While anatomy is
studied, the course is not an anatomy class. Male and
female models, clothed and nude, are used. Lab fee.
ARST 41304. Watercolor, Multilevel
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): ARST 21303 or ARST 231S or
ARST 232S
This course is a continuation of the watercolor medium and deals with a variety of methods, materials,
and techniques (both realistic and abstract) with special emphasis on color and composition. Lab fee.
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ARST 41305. Painting Studio
(0-6-V)
This course is devoted to defining personal painting
directions (oil/acrylic). Students gain experience in
criticism and in exhibition techniques.
ARST 41307. Painting, Multilevel
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course extends and develops the skills and
concepts initiated in Painting I and II. Students are
engaged in projects that allow them to hone their
technical skills while they define and develop their
individual concerns as well as the formal means
through which to communicate those concerns. Lab
fee.
ARST 41402. Advanced Photography
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This is an advanced photography course that allows
students to explore their own areas of interest while
learning about a broad range of contemporary photographic issues. Students may work in any photo
medium (black-and-white, color, digital, etc.) they
choose. Emphasis is on creating a portfolio of
images.
ARST 41403. Digital Photography
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course uses computers for creative image making. Students are introduced to the practices and
procedures of digital imaging with an emphasis on
exploring their own personal work. Lab fee.
ARST 41407. Studio Photography
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course introduces the student to the fundamentals of studio photography. Included are lighting
skills and the basics of medium- and large-format
cameras. The course serves as an introduction to
both commercial illustration and methods for personal work with the view camera.
ARST 41416. Intermediate Film Production
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): FTT 30410 or FTT 361
This film production course will focus on 16mm
black-and-white silent narrative filmmaking. We will
explore the technical use and aesthetic application
of the film camera and related equipment as well as
the development of the short film narrative script.
Students will shoot a short film lighting and composition exercise and in-class film test, and ultimately
produce, shoot, and edit one four- to six-minute,
16mm B/W film in teams of two. The projects will
be edited digitally, but there will be NO effects,
fades, dissolves, titles, or sound. The filmmaking
process requires a lot of field work on locations and
transporting heavy equipment. In addition to the
projects there will be a midterm and a few papers
required. Materials fee required.
ARST 41417. Advanced Film Production
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): FTT 40410 or FTT 448A
This production workshop encourages the development of short scripts (including casting, pre-production, and storyboarding) for fiction, nonfiction, or
formal film projects by pairs of students. It stresses
writing skills with an emphasis on the development
of innovations that expand the existing traditions of
and boundaries between fiction and nonfiction practices. Application may be obtained from Web: http:
//www.nd.edu/~ftt/ or in 230 DeBartolo Performing
Arts Center.
ARST 41418. Professional Video Production
(4-0-4)
PA course for the advanced production student
interested in the techniques and technology of the
broadcast video industry, utilizing the following
post-production software: Avid Media Composer,
Adobe After Effects, Lightwave 3D, and Digidesign
Pro Tools. Students produce projects using BetacamSP and DV video equipment while learning the
basics of non-linear editing, digital audio sweetening,
2-D compositing and 3-D animation techniques.
ARST 41506. Multilevel Books and
Printmaking
(3-0-3)
This course offers advanced experience in making
artist’s books, lithography, photolithography, etching, silkscreen, and relief. Emphasis is on developing
personal work and imagery. Lab fee.
ARST 41608. Sculpture Studio
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): ARST 11601 or ARST 149S
This advanced sculpture course offers serious students an opportunity to pursue a sculptural direction
and to carry that direction to a professional level of
competence. It also develops the student’s awareness
of definitions and criticism of sculpture. The work
may be done in any three-dimensional medium.
ARST 43406. Topics in Photography
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This is a topics course for advanced photography
students. Students are engaged in critical issues involving contemporary studio practice through slide
lectures, discussions, visiting artist interviews, gallery
visits, and student presentations. Directed readings
and critical writings will be assigned during the semester. Students will concurrently develop a creative
project. Lab fee.
ARST 43702. BFA Seminar
(3-0-3) Collins
BFA majors only. Required of all BFA studio and design majors. This course is designed to broaden the
context of the student’s chosen major in the department by introducing the student to alternative and
integrated points of view from all areas of study that
are represented by the studio and design field. This
course will help first semester senior BFA majors to
orient toward their chosen direction and project for
the BFA thesis. Critical writing and directed readings
will be assigned throughout the semester. Slide lectures, visiting artist interviews, gallery visits, student
presentations, portfolio preparation, and graduate
school application procedures will supplement the
course.
ARST 47171. Special Studies—Ceramics
(V-0-V)
Independent study in ceramics: research or creative
projects.
ARST 47271. Special Studies—Painting/
Drawing
(V-0-V)
Independent study in painting or drawing: research
or creative projects.
ARST 47471. Special Studies—Photography
(V-0-V)
Independent study in photography: research or
creative projects. Open to upper level students with
permission of the instructor.
ARST 47571. Special Studies—Printmaking
(3-0-3)
Independent study in printmaking: research or creative projects.
ARST 47671. Special Studies—Sculpture
(V-0-V)
Independent study in sculpture: research or creative
projects.
ARST 47771. Special Studies
(V-0-V)
Independent study in art studio: research or creative
projects.
ARST 48103. BFA Thesis—Ceramics
(3-0-3)
The BFA thesis is defined by an independent thesis
project, continuing for two semesters during the
senior year. The BFA thesis is a personal visual statement that is the culmination of a student’s collective
development within the department and can be the
extension of an ongoing body of work or a defining
project. The thesis project is supported by a written
statement defining the project, which is due at the
end of the first senior semester. The thesis project
culminates in the second senior semester with a BFA
thesis exhibition. The student signs up with a faculty
member working in ceramics, who serves as an advisor for the thesis project.
ARST 48203. BFA Thesis—Painting/Drawing
(3-0-3)
The BFA Thesis is defined by an independent thesis
project, continuing for two semesters during the
senior year. The thesis is a personal visual statement
that is the culmination of a student’s collective
development within the department and can be the
extension of an ongoing body of work or a defining
project. The thesis project is supported by a written
statement defining the project, which is due at the
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art, art history, and design
end of the first senior semester. The thesis project
culminates in the second senior semester with a BFA
thesis exhibition. The student signs up with a faculty
member working in painting or drawing, who serves
as an advisor for the thesis project.
ARST 48403. BFA Thesis—Photography
(3-0-3)
The BFA thesis is defined by an independent thesis
project, continuing for two semesters during the
senior year. The thesis is a personal visual statement
that is the culmination of a student’s collective
development within the department and can be the
extension of an ongoing body of work or a defining
project. The thesis project is supported by a written
statement defining the project, which is due at the
end of the first senior semester. The thesis project
culminates in the second senior semester with a
thesis exhibition. The student signs up with a faculty
member working in photography, who serves as an
advisor for the thesis project.
ARST 48503. BFA Thesis—Printmaking
(3-0-3)
The BFA Thesis is defined by an independent thesis
project, continuing for two semesters during the
senior year. The thesis is a personal visual statement
that is the culmination of a student’s collective
development within the department and can be the
extension of an ongoing body of work or a defining
project. The thesis project is supported by a written
statement defining the project, which is due at the
end of the first senior semester. The thesis project
culminates in the second senior semester with a
thesis exhibition. The student signs up with a faculty
member working in printmaking, who serves as an
advisor for the thesis project.
ARST 48603. BFA Thesis—Sculpture
(3-0-3)
The BFA Thesis is defined by an independent thesis
project, continuing for two semesters during the
senior year. The thesis is a personal visual statement
that is the culmination of a student’s collective
development within the department and can be the
extension of an ongoing body of work or a defining
project. The thesis project is supported by a written
statement defining the project, which is due at the
end of the first senior semester. The thesis project
culminates in the second senior semester with a
thesis exhibition. The student signs up with a faculty
member working in sculpture, who serves as an advisor for the thesis project.
Design Courses
DESN 11100. 2-D Foundations
(0-6-3)
Art majors only. This course deals with fundamentals
of two-dimensional design and is intended for students entering studio practice for the first time. The
course is also open to more advanced students who
wish to increase their knowledge of the elements and
principles of design. The course is project-oriented.
Studio practice in the basic principles of design employing color theory, form, and space organization,
as well as materials and processes used in the design
process, are emphasized. Lab Fee.
DESN 21101. Graphic Design I
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): DESN 11100 or DESN 111S
This introductory course explores the origins,
concepts, and processes affecting traditional and
contemporary graphic design. Laboratory activities
introduce and implement computer and print technology for the creation of original design projects.
Lab Fee.
DESN 21200. Visual Dialogue
(0-6-3)
Open to all students. This cross-disciplinary course
in rapid sketching and rendering technique serves
studio art, design, and architecture. The course is
intended for students entering studio practice for the
first time as well as for advanced students who wish
to deepen their visualization and illustration skills.
Lab Fee.
DESN 21201. Product Design I
(0-6-3)
This foundation 3-D design studio begins as a natural extension of Basic Design. Students are encouraged to think and work in three-dimensional media.
A series of fundamental design problems are assigned
during the course of the semester. Emphasis is placed
on the transformation of imagination from mind to
paper to model. Computer-aided design (CAD) is
also introduced into assignments. Lab Fee.
DESN 31203. Product Design III
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): DESN 21201 or DESN 218S
This design research studio challenges the advanced
student with problems requiring a combination
of skills. Investigation leads to an identification of
needs. Final proposals will demonstrate concern for
human factors, knowledge of material and process,
and a sensitivity of form. Presentations typically
include project documentation, conceptual information, control drawings, renderings, and finished
presentation models. National and regional industrysponsored projects are employed on occasion.
DESN 31204. Product Design Research
Project
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course exposes art and design students to common low- and high-production manufacturing processes. Students use these methods to execute their
own original designs. Students are introduced to
plastic thermoforming, injection molding, sheet and
profile extrusion, blow-molding, rotational molding,
reaction-injection molding, and open mold laminating. Metal processes include roll forming, foundry
sand casting, die-casting, extrusion, stamping, anodizing, and plating. Lab Fee.
DESN 31205. Digital 3-D
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): DESN 21201 or DESN 218S
This course introduces students to Alias Wavefront
software, a powerful conceptual tool for modeling
and animating complex objects. In this digital exploration, computer technology will be used to generate, modify, and present design ideas. Lab Fee.
DESN 31208. Furniture I
(0-6-3)
This course is an introduction to furniture design
encompassing the study of modern designers and
contemporary design issues. A series of furniture design problems are assigned that serve as focus for investigations into contemporary and non-traditional
applications of design principles. Full-scale furniture
is produced for each project. Lab Fee.
DESN 31316. Stagecraft: Theory and Practice
(3-0-3)
A practical introduction to techniques, processes,
and materials. The student will explore traditional
and modern stagecraft methods: carpentry, rigging,
basic scenic painting as well as basic technical drafting, design ideas, equipment use, safety, material
handling, and problem solving. Students will gain
practical experience participating on realized projects
and productions.
DESN 41102. Graphic Design II
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): DESN 21101 or DESN 281S
This advanced course in visual communication is for
students interested in the art of typography, its history, and the use of type as a critical element in the
world of graphic design. Lab Fee.
DESN 41103. Graphic Design III
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): DESN 41102 or DESN 415S)
This advanced course in visual communication
is for students who intend to pursue the field of
graphic design after graduation. The class will help
prepare students both technically and creatively for
professional practice by focusing on research-based
projects. Lab Fee.
DESN 41104. Multimedia Design
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): DESN 21101 or DESN 281S
This advanced digital image-making course gives the
studio or design major the opportunity to pursue
research and development in an advanced area of
technology. In some semesters, a topic is announced
as a focus for the course such as Postscript programming or hyper-media design.
DESN 41105. Multimedia Design II
(0-6-3)
Prerequisite(s): DESN 21101 or DESN 281S
This advanced digital image-making course gives the
studio or design major the opportunity to pursue
research and development in an advanced area of
technology. In some semesters, a topic is announced
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art, art history, and design
as a focus for the course such as Postscript programming or hyper-media design.
DESN 41209. Furniture Design Studio
(0-V-V)
Prerequisite(s): DESN 31208 or DESN 330S
This course offers advanced students an opportunity
to develop a personal direction, using wood as a material of expression. Lab Fee.
DESN 45310. Design Internship
(V-0-V)
Permission required. This course provides an opportunity for the design student to earn credit at an
approved design office.
DESN 47171. Special Studies—Graphic
Design
(V-0-V)
Independent study in graphic design: research or
creative projects.
DESN 47271. Special Studies—Product
Design
(V-0-V)
Independent study in product design: research or
creative projects.
DESN 47371. Special Studies
(V-0-V)
Permission required. Independent study in design.
DESN 48103. BFA Thesis—Graphic Design
(3-0-3)
The BFA Thesis is defined by an independent thesis
project, continuing for two semesters during the
senior year. The thesis is a personal visual statement
that is the culmination of a student’s collective
development within the department and can be the
extension of an ongoing body of work or a defining
project. The thesis project is supported by a written
statement defining the project, which is due at the
end of the first senior semester. The thesis project
culminates in the second senior semester with a
thesis exhibition. The student signs up with a faculty
member working in graphic design, who serves as an
advisor for the thesis project.
DESN 48203. BFA Thesis—Product Design
(3-0-3)
The BFA Thesis is defined by an independent thesis
project, continuing for two semesters during the
senior year. The thesis is a personal visual statement
that is the culmination of a student’s collective
development within the department and can be the
extension of an ongoing body of work or a defining
project. The thesis project is supported by a written
statement defining the project, which is due at the
end of the first senior semester. The thesis project
culminates in the second senior semester with a
thesis exhibition. The student signs up with a faculty
member working in graphic design, who serves as an
advisor for the thesis project.
The Art History Major
The bachelor of arts degree program in art history is
a 30-credit-hour major. An art history major should
strive to achieve a broad knowledge of the development of the art of the Western world. Majors are
required to take the Theories of Art seminar (three
credit hours) and complete a final thesis in the fall of
his or her senior year. The thesis, normally between
20 and 30 pages in length, is done under the direction of one of the regular art history faculty. It is expected to demonstrate the student’s ability to treat an
important art historical topic in a manner that shows
writing skills and methodological training. It is expected that the thesis will be suitable for submission
as a writing sample for students intending to apply
to art history graduate programs. In addition, the department offers courses in four areas of Western art:
ancient, medieval, Renaissance, and baroque, and
modern (19th and 20th centuries). An art history
major must take at least one course in each of these
areas (12 credit hours). It is strongly recommended
that this distribution requirement be fulfilled with
20000- or 30000-level introductory courses taught
by regular art history faculty on campus. The remaining 12 credit hours may be taken in any area.
Students must also have taken a minimum of two
seminars in addition to Theories of Art in the process
of fulfilling the major. The sequence in which the
required and elective courses and seminars are taken
is left to the discretion of the individual student. The
Theories of Art seminar should be taken in either the
junior or senior year.
Students with a first major in another department
can complete a second major in art history by taking
one course in each of the four departmental areas, an
art history seminar, and three electives in art history
(24 credit hours total). It is strongly recommended
that the four-course distribution requirement be
fulfilled with 20000- or 30000-level introductory
courses taught by regular art history faculty on
campus.
Students wishing to minor in art history can do so
by taking five art history courses (15 credit hours total). At least one of these courses must treat material
prior to 1600, and at least one must treat material
from 1600 to the present.
Courses taken for the second major or the minor
cannot be counted in more than one university
program.
Course Descriptions. The following course descriptions give the number and title of each course.
Lecture hours per week, laboratory, and/or tutorial
hours per week, and credits each semester are in parentheses. “V” indicates variable. Prerequisites, if any,
are also given. Most of the following courses are offered at least once over a three-year period. Be sure to
consult the course elective booklet published by the
department each semester for particular offerings.
ARHI 13182. Fine Arts University Seminar
(3-0-3) Coleman, Rosenberg
University seminars will address a variety of topics in
the history of art depending on the interests of the
professor. These courses require several short papers
as well as a final written exercise appropriate to the
material.
ARHI 20100. Introduction to Ancient Greece,
Rome, Egypt
(3-0-3)
This course will examine the origins of western art
and architecture, beginning with a brief look at the
Bronze Age cultures of the Near East and Egypt,
then focusing in detail on Greece and Rome, from
the Minoan and Mycenaean world of the second
millennium BCE to the rule of the Roman emperor
Constantine in the fourth century CE Among the
monuments to be considered are ziggurats, palaces,
and the luxuriously furnished royal graves of Mesopotamia; the pyramids at Giza in Egypt and their funerary sculpture; the immense processional temple of
Amon at Luxor; the Bronze Age palaces of Minos on
Crete—the home of the monstrous Minotaur—and
Agamemnon at Aycanae, with their colorful frescoes
and processional approaches; the great funerary pots
of early Athens and the subsequent traditions of Red
and Black Figure vase painting; architectural and
freestanding sculpture of the Archaic and Classical
periods; the Periclean Acropolis in Athens, with its
monumental gateway and shining centerpiece, the
Parthenon; and finally, among the cultural riches of
Rome, the painted houses and villas of Pompeii; the
tradition of republican and Imperial portraiture; the
Imperial fora; the exquisitely carved Altar of Peace of
Augustus; the Colosseum; and the Pantheon of the
Philhellene Emperor Hadrian.
ARHI 20300. Introduction to Renaissance Art
(3-0-3)
This course will survey the major trends in the art
of Italy and Northern Europe from roughly 1300
to 1575. It will concentrate on such major figures
as Giotto, Donatello, Masaccio, Botticelli, Raphael,
Michelangelo, and Titian in Italy, and the Limbourg
Brothers, Jan van Eyck, Rogier van der Weyden,
Hieronymus Bosch, Albrecht Durer, Mathias
Grunewald, and Pieter Brueghel in the North. It
will consider such themes as artistic production and
technique, public and private spirituality, naturalism,
narrative, and the changing status of the artist.
ARHI 20310. Survey of Italian Renaissance Art
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. This course will examine the
painting, sculpture, and architecture produced in
Italy from the very end of the 12th through the
beginning of the 16th century, from Giotto’s Franciscan spirituality to Michelangelo’s heroic vision of
man and God. A wide variety of questions will be
considered in the context of this chronological survey, including changing conventions of representation, the social function of art, and the impact of the
Renaissance ideology of individual achievement on
the production of art and the role of the artist.
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ARHI 20362. European Art and Architecture of
the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
(1-0-3)
This course will survey major stylistic trends in
17th- and 18th-century painting, sculpture, and architecture in Italy, Spain, France, the Low Countries,
England, and Germany. The course will begin with
the art of the Counter-Reformation in Italy and will
end with the Age of the Enlightenment, encompassing the reigns of Pope Urban VIII to the death of
Louis XVI. Stylistic trends such as the Baroque,
Rococo, and the origins of Neoclassicism will be
discussed through the works of such diverse artistic
personalities as Bernini, Caravaggio, Gentileschi,
Velasquez, Poussin, Rembrandt, Rubens, Wren,
Hogarth, Reynolds, Watteau, Boucher, Fragonard,
Robert Adam, Neumann, Tiepolo, and Zimmermann. Discussion will also focus on the impact
on art and artists by religious orders, emerging
modern European states, capitalism, and global
expansionism.
ARHI 20420. Nineteenth-Century European Art
and Architecture
(3-0-3)
This course will survey the major monuments of
painting, sculpture, and architecture that were
produced in the dynamic 100 years following the
French Revolution. We will investigate how artists
and architects envisioned a new modern society, at
the same time that the old social structures and supports crumbled around them. We also will consider
how new materials and experimental techniques
contributed to ways of representing the experience of
modern life.
ARHI 20440. Introduction to Twentieth-Century
Art
(3-0-3)
This course provides an introduction to art, aesthetic
philosophy, art criticism, and cultural politics from
1900 to the present. European and American art are
the primary focus. Rather than a mere chronological
survey of artistic movements, the course addresses a
range of conceptual problems to engage students in
different modern methods (Marxist, psychoanalytic,
formal, feminist and so forth) for interpreting art
and its history. Painting, sculpture, photography,
video, and graphic design are among the media analyzed. Among the artists studied are Henri Matisse,
Pablo Picasso, Georgia O’Keeffe, Alexander Rodchenko, Max Ernst, Jackson Pollock, Andy Warhol,
Judy Chicago, Cindy Sherman, and others. Lectures,
class discussions of assigned readings, and museum
visits are key components of the course.
ARHI 20441. Twentieth-Century Art I: 1900–55
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on early 20th-century art and
cultural politics in Europe and the US. In the early
modern period, many ambitious and innovative
artists strove to destroy old models of art, replacing them with models that advocated revolutionary
forms for a new, imaginary society. At other times,
artists employed art to undermine accepted norms of
bourgeois culture and to liberate art and experience
from convention. These themes are addressed in this
course, along with the contradictory reality in which
the art arose: an era defined by both optimism and
fear, technological progress and massive wars, violent
racism, and political liberation. Among the selected
artists analyzed are Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Piet
Mondrian, Marcel Duchamp, Hannah Hoch, Lyubov Popova, Salvador Dali, Walter Gropius, Diego
Rivera, and Jackson Pollock.
ARHI 20500. Introduction to Art and
Catholicism
(3-0-3)
This undergraduate lecture/discussion course will
give students the opportunity to analyze and discuss
the history of Catholic doctrine as it pertains to the
visual arts. From the Council of Elvira in AD 306
to John Paul II’s Letter to Artists of 1999, Catholicism has engaged with and debated the role of the
arts as a legitimate vehicle for spiritual experience
and theological knowledge. In this course, we will
examine the changing, complex, and various ideas
that have been brought to the question of the function of art in the Church. It will become clear that
Catholic attitudes to the arts have been subject to
a range of influences that have helped shape a still
fluid and potential relationship between Catholicism
and art. Among other topics we will examine the accommodation of traditional pagan practices in Late
Antiquity; the impact of Byzantine and Carolingian
theological discourse on the arts; Mendicant thought
and practice regarding the arts; lay piety in the Later
Middle Ages; issues raised by the Reformation; the
Council of Trent, and the Counter-Reformation; the
implications of Modernism; neo-Thomist aesthetics;
and the aftermath of Vatican II. In all instances, the
course will be shaped by the discussions of primary
readings (in translation when necessary) that will
set these texts in a context that is social, intellectual,
theological, and cultural. Each reading will then
lead to an examination of the artistic environment
that preceded and succeeded the ideas shaped by
these texts. It is expected that students will leave this
course with a rich knowledge of the central ideas and
works of art that have come to shape the continuing
dialogue between Catholicism and art.
ARHI 20510. Understanding Museums
(3-0-3)
This course is designed to present the museum as a
resource from the past, present, and future for learning and enjoyment. It introduces the student to the
issues that challenge art museums in general and the
Snite Museum of Art in particular. It provides the
tools that make a museum visit more meaningful
and immediate.
ARHI 20830. Chicano Art Survey
(2-0-2)
The student will investigate the social turmoil and
conditions of Chicano people that gave rise to the
Chicano Art Movement. The course will illuminate
the fundamental concerns to the artist and why the
mural and the poster were chosen to confront these
conditions. The original intentions of the artists and
the direction of their work has taken will be examined and analyzed within this social context.
ARHI 30101. Hellenistic and Roman Art and
Architecture
(3-0-3) Rhodes
This course explores the architecture, urban planning, sculpture, and painting of Hellenistic Greece
and Rome, from the time of Alexander the Great in
the fourth century BCE to the reign of the Roman
emperor Constantine in the fourth century CE.
The art and architecture of Greece and Rome will
be analyzed as expressions of their culture and time
and as tools for understanding these cutures more
completely. A variety of themes will be addressed,
including changing conceptions of monumentality
in art and architecture; imperial propaganda in art,
architecture, and religion; technology as inspiration
for new conceptions of art and architecture; the contrasting natures of Greek and Roman art and culture;
the influence of Greek culture on Rome; and the
nature and significance of the ever-changing mixture
of Greek and native Italic elements in Roman art and
architecture.
ARHI 30120. Survey of Greek Art and
Architecture
(3-0-3)
This course analyzes and traces the development
of Greek architecture, painting, and sculpture in
the historical period, from the eighth through the
second centuries BC, with some consideration of
prehistoric Greek forebears of the Mycenaean Age.
Particular emphasis is placed upon monumental
art, its historical and cultural contexts, and how it
reflects changing attitudes towards the gods, human
achievement, and the relationship between the divine
and the human.
ARHI 30130. Etruscan and Roman Art and
Architecture
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. Roman Art of the Republic
and Empire is one focus of this course, but other
early cultures of the Italian peninsula and their rich
artistic production are also considered. In particular,
the arts of the Villanovans and the Etruscans are examined and evaluated as both unique expressions of
discrete cultures and as ancestors of and influence on
Rome. The origins and development of monumental
architecture, painting, portraiture, and historical
relief sculpture are isolated and traced from the early
first millennium BC through the early fourth century of the modern era.
ARHI 30200. Survey of Medieval Art
(3-0-3)
This course will provide an introduction to the visual
arts of the period c. AD 300 to c. AD 1300. In the
course of the semester, we shall devote much time to
considering the possibility of a history of Medieval
art, as the objects and practices of the Middle Ages
will be shown to make our assumptions about the
nature of art history problematic. Working from individual objects and texts we will construct a series of
narratives that will attend to the varieties of artistic
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art, art history, and design
practices available to the Middle Ages. From these, it
will be shown that art was a vital, complex, lucid and
formative element in the societies and cultures, both
secular and sacred, that shaped this period.
saints, and crusades to Jerusalem are among the issues discussed in relation to the arts. Monastic and
ecclesiastical reform, heresy, and renewed interest in
antiquity are also considered.
ARHI 30202. The Contest of Word and Image
in Early Medieval Art
ARHI 30250. Gothic Art
(3-0-3)
This course will introduce students to the architecture of the Middle Ages (ca. 300–1400). This
introductory course will begin with early Christian
architecture and culminates in the great Gothic Cathedrals of northern Europe. Students will not only
be invited to consider the development of the architectural forms of the church building, but will also
be able to consider the degree to which the changing
nature of the church building reflects broader issues
in the history of Christianity in the Middle Ages.
ARHI 30210. The Formation of Christian Art
(3-0-3)
Art in late antiquity has traditionally been characterized as an art in decline, but this judgment is
relative, relying on standards formulated for art of
other periods. Challenging this assumption, we will
examine the distinct and powerful transformations
within the visual culture of the period between the
third and the eighth centuries AD. This period witnesses the mutation of the institutions of the Roman
Empire into those of the Christian Byzantine Empire. The fundamental change in religious identity
that was the basis for this development had a direct
impact upon the visual material that survives from
this period, such that the eighth century witnesses
extensive and elaborate debates about the status and
value of religious art in Jewish, Moslem, Byzantine,
and Carolingian society. This course will examine the
underlying conditions that made images so central to
cultural identity at this period.
ARHI 30213. Art into History: Byzantine
(3-0-3)
Byzantine art has often been opposed to the traditions of Western naturalism, and as such has been an
undervalued or little known adjunct to the story of
Medieval art. In order to develop a more sophisticated understanding of this material, we will examine
the art produced in Byzantium in the period from
the ninth to the 12th century, a period that marks
the high point of Byzantine artistic production and
influence. Stress will be places upon the function
of this art within the broader setting of this society.
Art theory, the notions of empire and holiness, the
burdens of the past, and the realities of contemporary praxis will be brought to bear upon our various
analyses of material from all media. How we, as art
historians can write the history of this rich culture
will be a central issue in this course.
ARHI 30240. Romanesque Art
(3-0-3) Barber
This course examines sculpture, architecture, manuscript illumination, and mural painting along with
the arts produced for church and court treasuries in
Western Europe during the 11th and 12th centuries.
Pilgrimage to the holy shrines, the veneration of
(3-0-3)
It was during the Gothic period, stretching approximately from the 12th to the 15th centuries,
that artists raised their social status to a higher level
and produced a greater quantity of works than ever
before seen in the Christian West. The architectural
forms that we identify as characterizing the Gothic
style, such as pointed arches, flying buttresses,
pinnacles, and quatrefoils were applied not only
to buildings, but to altarpieces, illuminated manuscripts, liturgical objects, and even to domestic items
such as spoons, beds, and chests. This style has a
powerful legacy, and has been frequently revived to
various purposes in the modern era. In this course
we analyze representative examples of Gothic art and
architecture in light of their production at a time of
great social, intellectual, religious, and political dynamism and upheaval.
ARHI 30311. Fifteenth-Century Italian
Renaissance Art
(3-0-3)
This course investigates the century most fully identified with the Early Renaissance in Italy. Individual
works by artists such as Brunelleschi, Donatello,
Ghiberti, Botticelli, and Alberti are set into their social, political, and religious context. Special attention
is paid to topics such as the origins of art theory, art
and audience, Medician patronage, and art for the
Renaissance courts of northern Italy and Naples.
ARHI 30340. Survey of Baroque Art
(3-0-3)
This course will examine the art of Europe during
the 17th century. The first third of the semester
will be devoted to the work of Counter-Reformation Italy and the work of individual artists such as
Caravaggio and Gian Lorenzo Bernini. The second
third of the term will focus on Spanish painting,
particularly the work of Francisco Zurbaran and
Diego Velazquez. The final section of the course will
consider painting in the Low Countries looking at
the art of Rubens, Rembrandt, Vermeer, and others.
Among the issues that will be addressed are art and
spirituality, shifting modes of patronage, art and
politics, and definitions of gender.
ARHI 30350. Survey of Italian Baroque Art:
From Caravaggio to Tiepolo
(3-0-3)
This course surveys Italian painting, sculpture, and
architecture of the 17th and 18th centuries, a period
that also witnessed the foundation and suppression
of the Jesuit Order, the Counter-Reformation, absolute monarchy, and democratic nations. Thus, the
course begins with the “new Rome” of Pope Sixtus
V, which attracted pilgrims and artists from all over
Europe, and ends with the early years of Enlightenment. From Northern Italy came Caravaggio and the
Carracci, artists who were responsible for creating a
new style based upon High Renaissance principles
and a new kind of naturalism derived from the
study of life. There was Bernini, whose architectural
and sculptural monuments almost single-handedly
gave Rome its Baroque character. Other artists and
architects of this era under discussion include such
diverse personalities as Borromini, Guarini, Algardi,
Artemisia Gentileschi, and the great ceiling painters
Pietro da Cortona, Baciccio, Pozzo, and Tiepolo.
ARHI 30417. British Art
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on the dynamic between art
and society in the period in which the Industrial
Revolution shaped the face of modern Britain. We
will examine paintings and architectural monuments
that register the devastating human consequences of
modernization during this 100-year period. As we
survey the response of British society to the forces
of industrialization, our themes will be the worship
of science and progress; the Romantic discovery of
nature, the imagination, and the exotic; images of
the rural and urban poor; the new constructions of
masculinity and femininity; the return to the Middle
Ages for sources of national identity and social reform. The principal artists discussed will be Joseph
Wright of Derby, William Blake, John Constable,
Joseph Mallord William Turner, Edwin Landseer, the
Pre-Raphaelites, and William Morris.
ARHI 30420. Nineteenth-Century European
Painting
(3-0-3) Pyne
This survey of 19th-century painting treats the
major figures of the period within the context of the
social, political, and intellectual ferment that shaped
the culture—primarily, the numerous political
revolution and the rise of industrial capitalism and
the middle class in France, England, and Germany.
Among the artistic movements discussed are neoclassicism, romanticism, realism, pre-Raphaelitism,
impressionism, and symbolism. Some of the major
themes addressed are the relationships between tradition and innovation, between the artist and public,
and between gender and representation, as well as
the multiple meanings of “modern” and “modernism.” The class will visit the Snite Museum of Art
on occasion to discuss special exhibitions related to
topics in the course.
ARHI 30441. Twentieth-Century Art I: 1900–55
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on early 20th-century art and
cultural politics in Europe, Russia, and the US In the
early modern period, many of the most ambitious
and innovative artists strove to destroy old models of
art, often replacing them with models that advocate
revolutionary forms for a new, imaginary society. At
other times, artists have employed art to undermine
accepted norms of bourgeois culture and to liberate art and experience from convention. These are
themes addressed in this course, along with the contradictory reality in which the art arose: an era defined by massive wars, racist ideologies, and violent
suppressions. Among the selected artists analyzed are
Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Piet Mondrian, Marcel
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Duchamp, Hannah Hoch, Lyubov Popova, Salvador
Dali, Walter Gropius, Diego Rivera, and Jackson
Pollock.
ARHI 30442. Twentieth-Century Art II: 1955 to
Present
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. The post-World War II era,
particularly in the United States, is marked by the
greatest expansion of corporate and consumer capitalism in history. Massive wars are fought to defend
capitalist ideology. How has art figured into these social transformations? Has art protested these conditions, or easily accommodated itself to overpowering
economic, political, and legalistic techno-capitalist
regimes? These questions arise throughout this
course, which concentrates on selective artistic events
in the US and Europe during the second half of the
20th century. Movements considered include pop
art, minimalism, op art, arte povera, post-minimalism, earth art, conceptual art, photo-realism, video
and performance art, and other recent picture/theory
approaches to art making. This course focuses on recent developments in painting and sculpture. It also
examines associated theories of art criticism.
ARHI 30501. Modeling Sanctity: The Saint in
Image and Text
(3-0-3)
In this course, we will examine the lives and legacy
of selected saints with a view to defining the ideal
qualities and criteria by which sainthood is made
known. Incorporating visual as well as textual materials, hagiographies, theological writings, and written
testimonies, the course will consider the varieties of
evidence that testify to sanctity. An important part of
this course will be a discussion of how different kinds
of evidence must be evaluated according to their
medium and audience: for example, how visual portrayals—whether portrait, narrative cycle, or manuscript representations—can be compared to written
ones, and differentiated from textual sources not
only in iconographic terms but also as unique and
forceful forms of knowledge in their own right.
ARHI 30502. The Art and Literature of
Metamorphoses
(3-0-3) Bloomer
This course begins with a critical study of Ovid’s
great poem, the Metamorphoses. The poem itself
became a subject of metamorphosis in poetry and art
in the hands of such figures as Statius, Dante, Botticelli, Bernini, Rembrandt, Hughes, and Heaney.
The course addresses the modeling of transformation
within the literary text by examining first Ovid and
his sources, and second, adaptations of his poem by
writers such as Shakespeare and Kafka. Connections
with folklore, magic, and religion are explored. The
graphic arts receive equal consideration as the course
explores how Ovid’s ideas of the transformation of
the body, the capacity of the human body for allegory, and the fragility of identity have influenced
later artists and authors.
ARHI 30521. The Art of Mythology
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. This cross-disciplinary class
is an exploration of the representation of classical
myth in Western art and literature, ranging from
the seventh century BCE to the 18th century CE.
Beginning with mythological subjects in the political and religious sculpture, temple architecture, and
vase decoration of Ancient Greece, we will move on
to study Roman painting and sculpture, medieval
Ovidian allegory, the Renaissance reinvention of
classical types, and 18th-century neo-classicism. We
will compare literary and visual narratives, evaluating the discursive modes of each, and analyzing how
and why poets, philosophers, artists, sculptors, and
architects selected and adapted the episodes that
they did. Primary readings will include selections
from Greek and Roman epic, lyric, and dramatic
poetry, Greek and Roman philosophical mythology,
and early analyses of the relationship between art
and myth such as Philostratus’ Eikones. Among the
artistic works that we will examine will be Raphael’s
Roman cycles, Bellini and Titian’s poesie, and Bernini’s sculpted dramas. We will consider the erudite
contexts for such works, including gardens, drawing
rooms, princely residences, and civic institutions. We
will discuss the connection between political power
and myth, and concepts such as heroism, metamorphosis, and earthly and divine love. One aim of this
class will be to identify the explanatory character of
myth, and of story-telling within culture, as means
of historical self-understanding, self-revelation, and
catharsis.
ARHI 30522. Fashioning Identity in American
History
(3-0-3)
This course will focus on dress and material/visual
culture in Colonial North America. It will introduce
methodology, and offer an overview of key themes
in the history of dress and consumerism within the
framework of gender studies. In our focus on the
colonial period (especially the 18th century), we
will analyze the economics of dress (the production,
marketing, and acquisition of cloth and clothing)
and will assess the importance of fashion to commerce and politics. We will evaluate the role of dress
in the construction of colonial identities, and we will
examine the ways that dress operated as a visual locus
for racial, class, and ethnic encounters.
ARHI 30540. Rome: A Journey in Art and
History
(3-0-3) Gill
This class is an exploration of the history and culture
of Rome from late medieval times through the 20th
century, with an emphasis on art and architecture.
We will examine the urban panorama of the Eternal
City through a series of layered investigations of its
major sites and monuments, such as the Capitoline Hill, St. Peter’s and the Vatican complex, the
Lateran, and Santa Maria Maggiore. We will read
travelers’ descriptions and literary evocations of
the city with a view to reliving the enchantment of
Rome, and the “idea” of Rome, through the ages. In
addition to our readings and lectures, members of
the class will have an opportunity to develop projects
on objects, structures, or works of art of their own
choosing.
ARHI 30550. History of Photography
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. This course deals with the
development and use of photography as an artistic
medium from time of its invention in the mid-19th
century up to the present moment. Besides viewing
slides, the student will be able to view a large number of original photographs from the Snite Museum
of Art.
ARHI 30801. Mesoamerican Art: Olmec and
Their Legacy
(3-0-3) Bradley
The Olmec civilization was the mother culture of
Mesoamerica, and beginning in 1500 BC. This
course will introduce the student to the Mesoamerican worldview by tracing the origins of Mexican art,
religion and culture from the development of the
Olmec civilization up to Aztec times.
ARHI 30840. Aesthetics of Latino Cultural
Expression
(3-0-3)
This course analyzes the philosophy, principles, and
practice underlying the social and political aspects
of Latino art. We will approach this by examining
a range of topics, including Chicano and Puerto
Rican poster art, mural art, Latina aesthetics, and
border art.
ARHI 33835. Topics in Latino Art
(3-0-3)
Topics course on specific aspects of Latino art. Topics
may vary depending on instructor.
ARHI 40121. Greek Architecture
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. In this course the development
of Greek monumental architecture, and the major
problems that define it, will be traced from the 8th
to the 2nd centuries BC, from the late Geometric
through the Archaic, Classical, and Hellenistic periods. Among themes to be related are the relationship
between landscape and religious architecture, the
humanization of temple divinities, the architectural
expression of religious tradition and even specific history, architectural procession and hieratic direction,
emblem and narration in architectural sculpture,
symbolism and allusion through architectural order,
religious revival and archaism, and the breaking of
architectural and religious canon.
40212. Byzantine Art
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. Byzantine art has often been
opposed to the traditions of Western naturalism,
and as such has been an undervalued or little known
adjunct to the story of medieval art. In order to develop a more sophisticated understanding of this material we will examine the art produced in Byzantium
in the period from the ninth to the 12th century, a
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art, art history, and design
period that marks the high point of Byzantine artistic production and influence. Stress will be placed
upon the function of this art within the broader setting of this society. Art theory, the notions of empire
and holiness, the burdens of the past and the realities
of contemporary praxis will be brought to bear upon
our various analyses of material from all media. How
we, as art historians, can write the history of this rich
culture will be a central issue of this course.
ARHI 40220. Early Medieval Art
(3-0-3)
This course will investigate the art produced in
Western Europe between the seventh and 11th centuries. Often characterized as a Dark Age, this period
in fact demonstrates a fertile, fluid, and inventive
response to the legacy of Late Antique Christianity.
The course will focus on the production and reception of illuminated manuscripts, using facsimiles
of these works as a basis for teaching. Students will
become familiar with art-historical methods for the
examination of such works, and will be invited to
contemplate the interplay of word and image that
these books propose. Categories of material discussed
include: Insular art, the Carolingian scriptoria, Ottonian imperial image making, Anglo Saxon art,
Spanish Apocalypses, and Italian Exultets.
ARHI 40311. Fifteenth-Century Italian Art
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. This course investigates the
century most fully identified with the Early Renaissance in Italy. Individual works by artists such as
Brunelleschi, Donatello, Ghiberti, Botticelli, and Alberti are set into their social, political, and religious
context. Special attention is paid to topics such as
the origins of art theory, art and audience, Medician
patronage, and art for the Renaissance courts of
northern Italy and Naples.
ARHI 40312. Venetian and Northern Italian
Renaissance Art
(3-0-3) Coleman
This course focuses on significant artistic developments of the 16th century in Venice with brief
excursions to Lombardy and Piedmont. Giorgione,
Titian, and Palladio, the formulators of the High
Renaissance style in Venice, and subsequent artists
such as Tintoretto and Veronese are examined. An
investigation of the art produced in important provincial and urban centers such as Brescia, Cremona,
Milan, Parma, Varallo, and Vercilli also provide
insight into the traditions of the local schools and
their patronage.
ARHI 40313. High Renaissance and Mannerist
Art
(3-0-3)
Leonardo, Michelangelo, Bramante, and Raphael
provide the basis of study of one of the most impressive periods of artistic activity in Italy-the High
Renaissance in Rome and Florence. The course also
investigates the origins of mannerism in the excessive
achievements of Jacopo Pontormo, Rosso Fiorentino,
and the succeeding generation of late-Renaissance
maniera artists who helped to formulate a new
courtly style.
ARHI 40320. Northern Renaissance Art
(3-0-3) Rosenberg
This course traces the development of painting in
Northern Europe (France, Germany, and Flanders)
from approximately 1300 to 1500. Special attention is given to the art of Jan Van Eyck, Rogier van
der Weyden, Heironymous Bosch, and Albrecht
Duerer. Through the consideration of the history of
manuscript and oil painting and the graphic media,
students will be introduced to the special wedding of
nature, art, and spirituality that defines the achievement of the Northern Renaissance.
ARHI 40360. Northern Baroque Painting
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. Epitomized by the self-conscious art of Rembrandt, Northern Baroque painting
and printmaking not only became a domestic commodity sold in a more modern-looking marketplace,
it also continued to serve its traditional political,
moral and spiritual functions. This course will
concentrate on paintings and prints produced in
Flanders, Spain, and the Dutch Republics during the
17th century, an era of extraordinary invention. The
work of artists such as Rubens, van Dyck, Vel·zquez,
Zurbar·n, Leyster, Hals, and Rembrandt will be
considered in the context of a number of interrelated
themes, including the business of art, the status of
the artist, art in service of the state, the rise of genre,
gender stereotypes, allegory, and art, religion, and
spirituality.
ARHI 40361. Eighteenth-Century European Art
(3-0-3)
Profound and universal inquiry into all aspects of
knowledge marked the history of the century of
Enlightenment and the Grand Tour. The rise of the
collective idea of nature, the study and instrumentality of the antique, the foundations of religion, the
state, morality and reason, the relationship of the
arts to the state, the philosophy of aesthetic, were
all critically analyzed and questioned. This course
investigates various stylistic trends in 18th-century
art in Italy, France, and England with a focus on the
institutionalization of art through the academies.
Discussion also centers on classical art theory and its
relationship to the academies in light of the social,
political, and religious climate of the period. We
will also consider the aesthetical, art historical, and
social consequences of the writings of Kant, Burke,
and Winckelmann. The course begins with the late
baroque paintings of Carlo Maratti and his followers, and then moves to subsequent stylistic trends as
neoclassicism, Egyptian revival, and the rococo. Attention is also given to the vedute painters, and such
diverse personalities as Piranesi, Mengs, Kauffmann,
Tiepolo, Watteau, and Chardin.
ARHI 40441. Twentieth-Century Art I: 1900–55
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on early 20th-century art and
cultural politics in Europe and the US. In the early
modern period, ambitious and innovative artists
strove to destroy old models of art, replacing them
with models that advocate revolutionary forms for
a new society. At other times, artists employed art
to undermine accepted norms of bourgeois culture
and to liberate art and experience from convention.
These themes are addressed in this course, in the
context of the contradictory reality in which the art
arose: an era defined by both optimism and fear,
technological progress and massive wars, violent
racism and political liberation. Among the selected
artists analyzed are Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Piet
Mondrian, Marcel Duchamp, Hannah Hoch, Lyubov Popova, Salvador Dali, Walter Gropius, Diego
Rivera, and Jackson Pollock.
ARHI 40442. Twentieth-Century Art II
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. This introductory course is
subtitled “Techno-Capitalism and the Art of Accommodation.” The post-World War II era, particularly
in the United States, is marked by the greatest expansion of corporate and consumer capitalism in history.
Massive wars are fought to defend capitalist ideology.
(A case in point is the tragic Vietnam War.) How has
art figured into these social transformations? Has art
protested these conditions or easily accommodated
itself to overpowering economic, political, and
legalistic techno-capitalist regimes? These questions
arise throughout this course, which concentrates
on selective artistic events in the United States and
Europe during the second half of the 20th century.
Movements considered include pop art, minimalism,
op art, arte povera, postminimalism, earth art, conceptual art, photo-realism, video and performance
art, and other recent picture/theory approaches to art
making. This course focuses on recent developments
in painting and sculpture. It also examines associated
theories of art criticism.
ARHI 40470. Architecture of the Twentieth
Century
(3-0-3) Doordan
This course is a survey of the significant themes,
movements, buildings, and architects in 20thcentury architecture. Rather than validate a single
design ideology such as Modernism, Postmodernism,
or Classicism, this account portrays the history of
architecture as the manifestation-in design terms-of
a continuing debate concerning what constitutes
an appropriate architecture for this century. Topics include developments in building technologies,
attempts to integrate political and architectural
ideologies, the evolution of design theories, modern
urbanism, and important building types in modern
architecture such as factories, skyscrapers, and housing. Class format consists of lecture and discussion
with assigned readings, one midterm exam, a final
exam, and one written assignment.
ARHI 40490. Architecture Now: Trends in
Contemporary Architecture
(3-0-3)
This is a survey of contemporary trends in global
architecture with a focus on recent developments in
design theory and building technologies. The course
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art, art history, and design
will examine a broad spectrum of architecture produced in the past decade.
ARHI 40520. Anthropology of Art
(3-0-3)
This course will examine art as a functional part
of culture from an anthropological point of view.
Attention is given to evolution of art as part of human culture and to evolution of the study of art by
anthropologists. Open to graduate students.
ARHI 40580. History of Design: Form, Values,
and Technology
(3-0-3)
This course will provide a historical perspective on
the development of industrial, product, and graphic
design in the 19th and 20th centuries. More than
the aesthetic styling of products, design mediates the
intersection of technology and cultural values in the
modern era. The role of the modern designer as both
a facilitator and a critic of industrial technology will
be examined.
ARHI 40850. Native North American Art
(3-0-3)
Traditional Native North American art will be studied through form, technique, and context, as well
as the perception of this art as exemplified through
changing content, technique, and context. Students
will work with the collections in the Snite Museum
of Art.
ARHI 43105. Seminar: Topics in Ancient Art
(3-0-3) Rhodes
Topics course on special areas of Greek and/or Roman art.
ARHI 43122. Seminar in Greek and/or Roman
Art
(3-0-3)
Seminar on specific subjects in Greek and/or Roman art.
ARHI 43123. Athenian Acropolis in Context
(3-0-3)
Permission required. The monumental elaboration
of the Athenian Acropolis did not begin with Pericles
and Pheidias in the mid-fifth century BC. Greek
monumental art and architecture were spawned in
the context of religion, and by the early Archaic
period, the Acropolis was the center of Athenian
religion; allmost immediately, religious awe and piety
were expressed in the form of imperssive freestanding
sculptural dedications and in large and meticulously
wrought stone buildings, elaborately decorated with
carved and painted designs and, most impressively,
with figural relief sculpture. The monuments of the
Athenian Acropolis must be understood first in this
context—as the embodiment of religious concepts—
and then in the context of Greek art and culture as
a whole. An ultimate goal of the seminar will be to
arrive at an understanding of the evolving meaning
of the Greek Temple and monumental form, and
how they find unique expression in the fifth century
Acropolis building program of Pericles. Among the
themes that will be treated to one degree or another
are the relationship between landscape and religious
architecture, the humanization of temple divinities,
the monumental expression of religious tradition and
even specific history, architectural procession and
hieratic direction, emblem and narration in architectural sculpture, symbolism and allusion through architectural order, religious revival and archaism, and
the breaking of architectural and religious canon.
Taken together, they constitute the specific architectural narrative of the Periclean Acropolis.
ARHI 43351. Seminar in Baroque Art
ARHI 43205. Topics in Medieval Art
(3-0-3)
Topics course on special areas of modern art.
(3-0-3) Barber
The topic and format of this course will vary from
year to year.
ARHI 43305. Topics in Renaissance Art
(3-0-3)
Topics course on special areas of Renaissance art.
ARHI 43312. Seminar: Venetian and Northern
Italian Art
(3-0-3)
Seminar on specific subjects in Venetian and Northern Italian Renaissance Art.
ARHI 43314. Seminar: Mannerism/Painting
and Sculpture
(3-0-3)
This course will explore the artistic rends in Italy
after the High Renaissance (c. 1520) and before the
Baroque (c. 1580), and will begin with definitions
of terminology and a brief historiographic survey.
Our attention will then turn to the Roman art of
Raphael’s heirs, Giulio Romano, Perino del Vaga,
and Polidoro data Caravaggio, and the emerging
Tuscan painters Pontormo, Rosso Fiorentino, and
Domenico Beccafumi. We will also investigate the
dispersal of the Roman school: Giulio Romano to
the Gonzaga course in Mantua, in 1524, and following the Sack of Rome by imperial troops in 1527,
other maniera artists to Genoa, Bologna, Parma, and
as far as the French royal chateau at Fontainebleau.
Rome consequently experienced a revival at the end
of the reign of Clement VII, and under the pontificate of Paul III, notably, the arts, politics, and theology flourished. This period may be marked by such
diverse works and Michelangelo’s monumental Last
Judgment (1536–41) and his frescoes (1542–45)
in the Pauline Chapel, Vatican Palace, the decorations (1536–51) by various mannerist artists in San
Giovanni Decollato, Perino’s elegant frescoes in the
Sala Paolina (1545–47), Castel Sant’ Angelo, Giorgio
Vasari’s fantastic murals in the Palazzo Cancelleria
(1546), and Francesco Salviati beautiful, secular
frescoes in the Palazzo Ricci-Sacchetti (c. 1553–54).
Attention will also be given to the art of the Counter-Reformation in Rome, and to painting and
sculpture by Bronzino, Salviati, Cellini, Bandinellui,
Vasari, Giambologna, and others a the Florentine
courts of Dukes Cosimo I and Francesco I.
ARHI 43315. Seminar in Renaissance Art
(3-0-3)
Seminar on specific subjects in Renaissance art.
(3-0-3)
Permission required. Seminar on specific subjects in
Baroque art.
ARHI 43404. Seminar in Modern European Art
(3-0-3)
Permission required. Seminar on specific subjects in
19th-century and 20th-century art.
ARHI 43405. Topics in Modern Art
ARHI 43577. Theories of Art
(3-0-3) Gill
This seminar is a survey of the historiography of art
history with special attention paid to the various
types of methodology that have been applied to the
analysis of art. Special attention is given to 19thcentury and 20th-century art historical methods,
including connoisseurship, biography, iconology,
psychoanalysis, semiotic, and feminist approaches.
Required of all art history majors.
ARHI 46572. Directed Readings
(V-0-V)
Permission required. Specialized reading related to
the student’s area of study.
ARHI 47171. Special Studies—Ancient Art
History
(V-0-V)
Independent study in ancient art history under the
direction of an individual faculty member.
ARHI 47271. Special Studies—Medieval Art
History
(V-0-V)
Independent study in medieval art history under the
direction of an individual faculty member.
ARHI 47371. Special Studies—Renaissance/
Baroque
(V-0-V) Independent study in Renaissance/Baroque
art history under the direction of an individual faculty member.
ARHI 47471. Special Studies—Modern Art
History
(V-0-V)
Independent study in modern art history under the
direction of an individual faculty member.
ARHI 47571. Special Studies
(V-0-V)
Permission required. Independent study in art history under the direction of an individual faculty
member.
ARHI 48573. Senior Thesis Direction
(V-0-V)
The senior thesis, normally between 20 and 30 pages
in length, is done under the direction of one of the
regular art history faculty, who serves as an advisor.
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classics
It is expected to demonstrate the student’s ability to
treat an important historical topic in a manner that
shows his or her writing skills and methodological
training. It is expected that the thesis will be suitable
for submission as a writing sample for those students
intending to apply to art history graduate programs.
Classics
Chair:
Keith R. Bradley
Eli J. Shaheen Professor of Classics:
Keith R. Bradley
Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, CSC, Professor of Arts
and Letters:
Sabine G. MacCormack
Professor:
Daniel J. Sheerin
Associate Professors:
Asma Afsaruddin (Arabic); Joseph P. Amar
(Arabic); W. Martin Bloomer; Elizabeth Forbis
Mazurek; Li Guo (Arabic); Brian A.
Krostenko; David J. Ladouceur; Catherine M.
Schlegel
Assistant Professors:
Christopher A. McLaren
Visiting Assistant Professors:
Andrew Faulkner
Concurrent Associate Professors:
Blake Leyerle; David O’Connor; Robin
Rhodes
Assistant Professional Specialist:
Tadeusz Mazurek; Abdul-Massih Saadi
(Arabic)
The department. The Department of Classics offers
programs of courses in the languages, literatures,
archaeology, history, religions, and civilization of the
ancient world. Cooperation with other departments
of the college makes available to Classics students additional courses in the art, philosophy, and political
theory of antiquity.
The department also provides the administrative
home for the programs in the languages and cultures
of the Middle East.
Majors in Classics
Classics majors encounter at their sources the perennial cultures of Greece and Rome, cultures that
continue to exercise a profound influence on EuroAmerican civilization. Classical training imparts enhanced skills in close reading and analysis of literary
and rhetorical forms, as well as repeated experience
of the integration of literature, history and ancillary
studies. Thus, a major in Classics provides the archetypal humanistic education and an ideal preparation
for entry into any of the professions that require
mastery of language, close analysis of documents and
integration of multiple details.
The lower-level courses equip the student with
rudimentary knowledge of languages and with a
conspectus of ancient history and culture. Advanced
courses in Latin and Greek literature and Ancient
Civilization provide opportunities for more focused
and detailed study and are conducted in a seminar
format with emphasis on research and writing.
In addition to the other University requirements,
students majoring in Classics will, under normal
circumstances, complete at least 10 courses in one
of two areas of concentration: Classics or Greek and
Roman Civilization.
Classics Major
5 courses in Greek or Latin language/literature:
20003 and above*
15
2 courses in Latin or Greek language/literature* 6
Greek or Roman History
3
2 Classics courses in English
6
———
30
*Students will typically choose one of the two classical languages, ancient Greek or Latin, in which
to fulfill the language requirement at the advanced
level. They will be required to take at least two
semesters in the other language at the appropriate
level. If students have sufficient background in both
languages, it should be possible for them to complete
the requirements of the major through a combination of intermediate and advanced courses in both
languages, as long as the total number of language
courses equals seven (21 credit hours) for the first
major and five (15 credit hours) for the supplementary major.
Supplementary majors in Classics will be exempt
from the two courses in the second classical
language.
Greek and Roman Civilization Major
The History of Ancient Greece
3
The History of Ancient Rome
3
Greek Literature and Culture
3
Roman Literature and Culture
3
Six Classics courses in English
or Greek and Latin language offerings* 18
————
30
*Students will be strongly encouraged, but not required, to include some language study in their six
elective courses.
Supplementary majors in Greek and Roman Civilization will be required to take four elective CLAS
courses in translation or Greek and Latin offerings.
Minors in Classics
Minors provide students majoring in other areas
with structure and certification for a variety of approaches to the study of Greek and Latin language,
literature and civilization.
Latin Minor
The Latin Minor provides a solid grounding in the
philological and literary study of Latin texts of the
classical period, or, for those who prefer, of Christian Latin literature. It consists ordinarily of five
courses (15 hours) in Latin: (1) Intermediate Latin
or its equivalent. This can be fulfilled by successful
completion of Intermediate Latin or by advanced
placement; (2) Reading and Writing Latin Prose;
(3–5) three courses to be chosen from Latin courses
at the 30000-/40000-level. Students interested in
later Latin texts are directed to the joint offerings of
the department and the Medieval Institute.
Greek Minor
The Greek Minor provides a solid grounding in the
philological and literary study of Greek texts of the
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classics
classical and Hellenistic periods. It consists ordinarily
of five courses (15 hours) in Greek: (1) Intermediate
Greek, or equivalent; (2) Reading and Writing Greek
Prose; (3–5) three courses to be chosen from Greek
courses at the 30000-/40000-level.
appreciation for ancient Greek culture is also fostered
through secondary readings and class discussion.
CLGR 10001 is offered each fall semester and
CLGR 10002 is offered each spring semester.
Classical Civilization Minor
The Classical Civilization Minor provides a broadly
based orientation to the history and civilization of
the classical world. It consists of five courses, three of
which are required: The History of Ancient Greece,
The History of Ancient Rome, and an approved
course in classical literature. The remaining two
courses may be chosen, with departmental approval,
either from CLAS courses, whether offered by the
department or crosslisted by other programs, or from
Greek and Latin language courses above the introductory level.
(20-0-3) Mazurek
This accelerated course provides an introduction to
ancient classical Greek for beginners. It emphasizes
the fundamentals of Greek grammar and vocabulary,
and prepares students to read original Greek texts.
Students who complete the course are eligible to proceed to the intermediate level of study.
Classical Literature (in Translation) Minor
The Classical Literature in Translation Minor provides a broad experience of Greek and Latin literature studied in English translation. It consists of five
courses, three of which are required: Greek Literature
and Culture, Latin Literature and Culture, and either Greek and Roman Mythology or Classical Epic
or Greek Tragedy. The remaining two courses may
be chosen, with departmental approval, either from
CLAS courses, whether offered by the department
or crosslisted by other programs, or from Greek and
Latin courses above the introductory level.
Course Descriptions. The following course descriptions give the number, title, and a brief characterization of each course. Lecture or class hours per
week, tutorial hours per week, and credits each
semester are in parentheses. Not all of these courses
are offered every year.
NOTE: All literature courses at the 30000 level
or above, whether in translation or in the original,
will satisfy the arts and letters elective option in
literature.
Greek
CLGR 10001. Beginning Greek I
(4-0-4)
This two-semester sequence of courses introduces
students to the language of the ancient Greeks
for the first time. It emphasizes the fundamentals
of ancient Greek grammar and vocabulary, and
prepares students to read original Greek texts. An
appreciation for ancient Greek culture is also fostered
through secondary readings and class discussion.
CLGR 10001 is offered each fall semester and
CLGR 10002 is offered each spring semester.
CLGR 10002. Beginning Greek II
(4-0-4)
Prerequisite(s): CLGR 10001 or CLGR 101
This two-semester sequence of courses introduces
students to the language of the ancient Greeks
for the first time. It emphasizes the fundamentals
of ancient Greek grammar and vocabulary, and
prepares students to read original Greek texts. An
CLGR 10111. Intensive Beginning Greek
CLGR 20003. Intermediate Greek
(3-0-3) Ladouceur
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This second-year language course builds on the work
of Beginning Greek I and II. It combines a review of
grammar with careful reading of classical Greek authors such as Homer and Plato. The course improves
students’ translating skills, introduces methods for
studying Greek literature in its historical and cultural
contexts, and prepares students for more advanced
work in the rich literature of the ancient Greeks. Offered each fall semester.
CLGR 20004. Reading and Writing Greek
Prose
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLGR 20003 or CLGR 103 or
CLGR 201 or CLGR 20103
This second-year language course continues the
review of grammar begun in CLGR 20003 and
introduces students to stylistic analysis through close
readings of classical Greek prose authors such as
Herodotus and Xenophon. A special feature of the
course is that students learn how to write classical
Greek for themselves. Offered each spring semester.
CLGR 20103. Intermediate Greek
(12-0-3) Stanfiel
This course combines a review of basic classical
Greek grammar with careful reading of such Greek
authors as Homer and Plato. It develops students’
translating skills, introduces methods for studying
Greek literature in its historical and cultural contexts, and prepares students for advanced work in
Greek language and literature.
CLGR 30011. Homer
(3-0-3) Faulkner
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This third-year course builds on CLGR 20003 and
CLGR 20004, and offers close reading of passages
from the Iliad and Odyssey. Homer’s epic poems
stand at the head of the tradition of European literature; their themes and poetic style have substantially
influenced the works of Dante, Milton, and many
other European writers. The poems are discussed
in their cultural context, and features of poetic oral
composition are examined. The course prepares
students for advanced offerings in Greek literature,
especially CLGR 40021 and CLGR 40031. Offered
in fall semester, alternate years.
CLGR 30012. Age of Herodotus
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLGR 20004 or CLGR 325
This third-year course builds on the work of CLGR
20003 and CLGR 20004, and offers close reading of
passages from the Histories of Herodotus. The Histories tells of the momentous wars between the Greeks
and the Persians in the early classical era, and is the
earliest surviving narrative of the western historical
tradition. The political, social, and cultural conditions of fifth-century Greece that inspired Herodotus
are discussed, and the development of Greek historywriting is examined. The course prepares students
for advanced offerings in Greek literature, especially
CLGR 40022, CLGR 40032, and CLGR 40042.
Offered in spring semester, alternate years.
CLGR 30013. Greek Tragedy
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLGR 20004 or CLGR 325
This third-year course builds on the work of CLGR
20003 and CLGR 20004 and offers close reading of
passages from the tragedies of Sophocles and Euripides. These plays illustrate the Athenian invention
and development of tragedy that took place when
Athens dominated Greece politically between the
Persian Wars and the Peloponnesian War, the great
fifth-century war against Sparta. The ways in which
the plays reveal and address the city’s ideological,
political, and sexual tensions are key themes for
discussion in the course, and matters of style are appropriately examined. The course prepares students
for advanced offerings in Greek literature, especially
CLGR 40023. Offered in fall semester, alternate
years.
CLGR 30095. Socratic Literature
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLGR 20004 or CLGR 325
This course will study the character and philosophical significance of Socrates within the context of the
intellectual ferment of late fifth Century Athens.
The Greek primary texts that constitute the heart of
the course are Plato’s Laches and Lysis and sections of
Xenophon’s Memorabilia. Issues that arise from those
texts, like the ideal of rational character and Socrates
great interest in Eros, will provide opportunities for
student research and classroom discussions.
CLGR 40021. Hesiod
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLGR 20004 or CLGR 325
This advanced course introduces students to the
poetry of Hesiod through close reading and detailed
study of the Theogony and the Works and Days. Both
works represent an early poetic tradition in Greek
literature parallel to but separate from that of Homer
which focuses on the human condition in a cosmos
controlled by all-powerful and vengeful gods. The
relationship of these central works of archaic Greek
literature to other archaic texts is a key theme for
discussion in the course.
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classics
CLGR 40022. Thucydides
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLGR 20004 or CLGR 325
This advanced course introduces students to the
historical writing of Thucydides through close reading and detailed study of the History of the Peloponnesian War. Often considered the most accurate and
methodical of the ancient historians, Thucydides
brought to Greek history-writing a high level of precision in both language and analysis. His uniquely
candid accounts of the history, politics, and social
effects of the great war between Athens and Sparta,
and the connection between content and literary
style are key themes for discussion in the course.
CLGR 40026. The Age of Alexander
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLGR 20004 or CLGR 325
Alexander the Great (356-323 BC) had a stunning
impact on the ancient Mediterranean world. Leading
a panhellenic crusade against the Persians, he created
an empire of enormous proportions that included his
native Macedonia, Greece, Egypt, and much of the
ancient Near East. In so doing he laid the foundations for the dispersal of Greek ideas and practices
over a huge area. This course examines Alexander’s
meteoric and ruthless career through careful study of
two Greek authors who wrote extensively about him,
Arrian and Plutarch.
CLGR 40031. Greek Lyric Poetry
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLGR 20004 or CLGR 325
This advanced course includes readings from
Archilochus’s iambic and elegiac poems, Sappho’s
monodies, and Pindar’s choral works. It introduces
students to archaic and classical Greek lyric poetry,
which represents a literary tradition that drew inspiration from religious ritual, contemporary politics,
and private experience. Its authors experimented
with diction, style, and meter in ways distinct from
those of the epic poets. The manner in which they
wrote and the ways in which they responded to the
epic tradition are key themes for discussion in the
course.
CLGR 40034. Plato
(3-0-3) McLaren
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This advanced course offers accelerated reading
and detailed study of the philosophical dialogues of
Plato, whose writings, often radical and challenging,
represent a cornerstone in the Western intellectual
tradition. The development of Plato’s philosophical
ideas in their historical context is a key theme for
discussion in the course, and attention is paid to the
main features of his prose style in selections of his
works.
CLGR 40063. Euripides
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLGR 20004 or CLGR 325
This advanced course offers accelerated reading and
detailed study of the tragic plays of Euripides, the
last of the great tragedians of classical Athens and
the object of ridicule from the comic writer Aristo-
phanes. Euripides’ plays depart from those of his predecessors first because of their escapist and romantic
plots and secondly because of their fierce engagement with contemporary Athenian politics and society. The course dwells on this development, and also
considers why Euripides is sometimes considered the
most radical of the Athenian tragedians.
CLLA 20003. Intermediate Latin
(V-0-V)
Permission of the department required.
(3-0-3) Krostenko, Mazurek, Schlegel
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This second-year language course builds on the work
of Beginning Latin I and II. It combines a review of
grammar with careful reading of classical Latin authors such as Cornelius,Nepos and Ovid. The course
improves students’ translating skills, introduces
methods for studying Latin literature in its historical
and cultural contexts, and prepares students for more
advanced work in the sophisticated literature of the
ancient Romans. Offered each fall semester.
CLGR 47801. Special Studies
CLLA 20004. Reading and Writing Latin Prose
CLGR 47001. Special Studies in Greek
Literature
(V-0-V)
Individual or small group study under the direction
of a departmental faculty member.
Latin
CLLA 10001. Beginning Latin I
(4-0-4) Mazurek, Sheerin
This two-semester sequence of courses introduces
students to the language of the ancient Romans for
the first time. It emphasizes the fundamentals of Latin grammar and vocabulary, and prepares students to
read original Latin texts. An appreciation for ancient
Roman culture is also fostered through secondary
readings and class discussion. CLLA 10001 is offered
each fall semester and CLLA 10002 is offered each
spring semester.
CLLA 10002. Beginning Latin II
(4-0-4)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 10001 or CLLA 101
This two-semester sequence of courses introduces
students to the language of the ancient Romans for
the first time. It emphasizes the fundamentals of Latin grammar and vocabulary, and prepares students to
read original Latin texts. An appreciation for ancient
Roman culture is also fostered through secondary
readings and class discussion. CLLA 10001 is offered
each fall semester and CLLA 10002 is offered each
spring semester.
CLLA 10010. Intensive Latin
(5-0-5)
This accelerated course provides an introduction to
the Latin language for beginners and covers in one
semester the contents of CLLA 10001 and CLLA
10002. Students who complete the course are eligible to proceed to the intermediate level of study. The
course meets five days a week and requires considerable work outside the classroom.
CLLA 10111. Intensive Beginning Latin
(20-0-3) Ladouceur
This accelerated course provides an introduction to
the Latin language for beginners. It emphasizes the
fundamentals of Latin grammar and vocabulary,
and prepares students to read original Latin texts.
Students who complete the course are eligible to proceed to the intermediate level of study.
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20003 or CLLA 103 or CLLA
103A or CLLA 201 or CLLA 20103
This second-year language course continues the
review of grammar begun in CLLA 20003 and introduces students to stylistic analysis through close
readings of Latin prose authors such as Cicero and
the younger Pliny. A special feature of the course is
that students learn to write classical Latin for themselves. Offered each spring semester.
CLLA 20103. Intermediate Latin
(12-0-3) Scheck
This course combines a review of basic Latin grammar with careful reading of classical Latin authors
such as Cornelius Nepos, and Ovid. It develops
students’ translating skills, introduces methods for
studying Latin literature in its historical and cultural
contexts, and prepares students for advanced work in
Latin language and literature.
CLLA 30011. Virgil
(3-0-3) Bloomer
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This third-year course builds on CLLA 20003 and
CLLA 20004, and offers close reading of passages
from the Aeneid. Virgil’s inspired adaptation of
Homer’s epic poems traces the story of the flight of
Aeneas from Troy to Italy, where Rome, a new Troy,
will be founded. The place of Virgil’s epic in the
emperor Augustus’ cultural program, various critical
approaches to the poem, and its compositional techniques provide subjects for discussion. The course
prepares students for advanced study in Latin literature, especially CLLA 40021, CLLA 40031, CLLA
40041, and CLLA 40051. Offered in fall semester,
alternate years.
CLLA 30012. Latin History—Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
This third-year course builds on CLLA 20003 and
CLLA 20004, and offers close reading of passages
from the works of the historical writers Caesar and
Sallust. Latin historiography is a sophisticated instrument for narrating past events, for showing how
notions of cause and effect and change over time
develop in historical thinking, and for indicating the
relevance of the past to the present. The political and
social conditions of Rome that informed the writings
of Caesar and Sallust are discussed, and the compositional techniques of their works are examined.
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The course prepares students for advanced offerings
in Latin literature, especially CLLA 40022, CLLA
40032, and CLLA 40052. Offered in spring semester, alternate years.
CLLA 30013. Roman Lyric Poetry
(3-0-3)
This third-year course builds on CLLA 20003 and
CLLA 20004, and offers close reading of passages
from the lyric poetry of such authors as Catullus and
Horace. The lyric form gives precise and economical
expression to a wide range of human thoughts and
emotions, from the highly personal to the grandly
patriotic. The range of Roman lyric, the technique
of its practitioners, and the place of lyric poetry in
Roman life are themes that receive special attention.
This course prepares students for advanced offerings
in Latin literature, especially CLLA 40023, CLLA
40033, CLLA 40043, and CLLA 40053. Offered in
fall semester, alternate years.
CLLA 30014. Age of Cicero
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
This third-year course builds on the work of CLLA
20003 and CLLA 20004, and offers close reading of
select speeches of Rome’s greatest orator, Cicero. The
art of persuasion was an essential requirement for
success in Roman public life, and no one was more
persuasive than Cicero. The flexibility and complexity of Cicero’s grammatical expression, the range
of his styles, and the political contexts in which his
speeches were delivered are all given careful treatment. The course prepares students for advanced
offerings in Latin prose, especially Latin CLLA
40024, CLLA 40034, and CLLA 40054. Offered fall
semester, alternate years.
CLLA 40016. Introduction to Christian Latin
Texts
(4-0-4) Sheerin
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
This class has two goals: to improve the student’s
all-around facility in dealing with Latin texts and to
introduce the student to the varieties of Christian
Latin texts. Medieval Latin II, a survey of medieval
Latin texts, follows this course in the spring term.
CLLA 40017. Medieval Latin Study
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
The aim of this course is to experience a broad spectrum of Medieval Latin texts. Readings representative of a variety of genres (literary and subliterary),
eras, and regions will be selected. Students planning
to enroll in this course should be completing Introduction to Christian Latin Texts or they must secure
the permission of the instructor. Those with interests
in particular text types should inform the instructor
well in advance so that he can try to accommodate
their interests.
CLLA 40023. Roman Elegiac Poetry
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
This advanced course introduces students to Latin
elegy, a form of verse that served Roman poets as a
vehicle for expressing and exploring personal feelings, especially those associated with love. Readings
from Catullus, Propertius, Tibullus, and Ovid expose
how Roman poets adapted and experimented with
the elegiac form to express highly charged personal
emotions often at odds with conventional Roman
values.
CLLA 40024. Roman Rhetoric
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
This advanced course introduces students to Roman
writings on rhetoric, a vital art in Roman public
and cultural life. Readings from the Rhetorica ad
Herennium, Cicero, the elder Seneca, Quintilian,
and Tacitus allow differing concepts of rhetoric to be
seen, the relationship between rhetorical theory and
practice to be understood, and the lasting value of
Roman efforts to theorize the power of speech to be
appreciated.
CLLA 40027. Medieval Latin Texts
(3-0-3)
A survey of Medieval Latin Texts, designed to introduce intermediate students to medieval Latin literature and to help them progress in translation skills.
CLLA 40031. Virgil
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
This advanced course deals with the full corpus
of Virgil’s poetry, and explores the creative history
of Rome’s greatest poet through close readings of
passages from his pastoral poetry, the Georgics and
Eclogues, and his masterpiece the Aeneid. Special attention is given to the settings in which Virgil composed his works, and current and traditional critical
interpretations of his poetry are considered.
CLLA 40032. Livy
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
This advanced course introduces students to the
historian Livy through close reading and detailed
study of passages from his grand narrative of Rome’s
history from the founding of the city to the age of
Augustus. Aeneas’ flight from Troy, Rome’s conquest
of Italy, and Hannibal’s dramatic invasion of Italy
across the Alps are some of the stirring topics to
which attention is given. Livy’s artistic and historical
methods, and his position in the emperor Augustus’
cultural program are key themes for discussion in
the course.
CLLA 40041. Ovid
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
This advanced course provides an introduction to
the poetry of the prolific author Ovid. It explores
the creative history of the one writer who can truly
be called a poet of the Augustan age through close
reading of passages from his love poetry (the Amores
and the Ars Amatoria, a handbook on seduction), his
great mythological poem, the Metamorphoses, and
the poems written after Ovid was exiled by Augustus
to a remote spot on the shores of the Black Sea (the
Tristia and Epistulae Ex Ponto). Special attention is
paid to the contexts in which Ovid composed his
works, and current and traditional interpretations of
his poetry are considered.
CLLA 40044. The Roman Novel
(3-0-3) Bradley
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This advanced course offers close reading and detailed study of excerpts from Petronius’ Satyricon and
Apuleius’ The Golden Ass. Ribald and full of comic
adventures, these works have much in common with
modern picaresque novels. Petronius’ Trimalchio,
an ex-slave buffoon, and Apuleius’ Lucius, a young
aristocrat magically transformed into an ass, are
two of Latin literature’s most memorable creations.
Narrative technique, critical interpretation, and the
special perspective on Roman life the works present,
are major subjects for discussion in the course.
CLLA 40054. St. Augustine’s Confessions
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
This advanced course introduces students to the
thought and manner of writing of Augustine through
close reading and detailed study of excerpts from his
highly self-reflective autobiography, the Confessions.
Augustine’s extended analysis of his spiritual development combines in a masterful way the language and
habits of thought of the Christian tradition with
those of classical philosophy and literature. The style
of the Confessions, the significance of the work, and
its relation to Augustinian thought at large are major
topics for discussion in the course.
CLLA 40094. Augustan Poets
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
With an initial glance back to Catullus and Lucretius, this course will concentrate on the Roman poets
who flourished under the aegis of Augustus. The
focus of the course, alongside the basic literary and
stylistic marvels of this poetry, will be the poets’ use
of emotion and its consequent destabilizing effects.
We will look at the complexities of the poetry that
belongs to this era of social and political upheaval.
Our readings in Latin will consist of selections
from Catullus and Lucretius, the last three books of
Virgil’s Aeneid (the whole of which students should
know in translation), and readings from Horace’s
Odes and Propertius’ Elegies. We will also look at
some modern critical views of Augustan poetry. Students’ mastery of the Latin texts, and their ability to
speak and write about these, will be evaluated.
CLLA 40095. Ovid’s Metamorphoses
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
In this course, we translate and discuss selected passages from the Metamorphoses, Ovid’s idiosyncratic
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poetic history of the world. Topics for our discussions include the spiritual, moral, religious, political,
and physical transformations portrayed between the
creation story at the beginning and the deification
of Caesar at the end of the text; the tension between
Ovid’s adherence to Roman traditions and his irreverent, sometimes subversive, artistic originality;
the poem’s narrative techniques, poetic style, and
structure; the significance of intertextual allusions
to Greek drama, Virgilian epic, and Ovid’s own love
poetry; the instability of gender; portraits of the
poet within the work; and the innumerable faces of
love, as presented through characters who are pious,
raging with passion, inseparable, violent, infatuated,
lovesick, devoted, and much more. Above all, this
course aims at clarifying how Ovid’s inexhaustible
playfulness and delightful wit contributed to shaping a work of both epic grandeur and lyric intimacy
that continues to inspire poets, composers, novelists,
painters, and at least one playwright whose version
recently made it all the way to Broadway. Daily preparation and active participation in class are essential
components of the course; brief written assignments,
one midterm exam, one brief project, and a final
exam also count towards the final grade.
CLLA 40096. Postclassical Satire
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
This survey will begin with introductory readings
in classical satire and satiric invective and narrative, and then move on to consider specimens of a
variety of late antique and medieval texts written in
a satiric mode: satire, invective, parody, mock epic,
etc. A sound knowledge of Latin is required. Course
requirements include in-class reports, an annotated
translation, and an interpretative essay.
CLLA 40115. Intensive Latin Review
(1-0-1) Mantello
This course is an intensive, one-week review of the
principal construction of classical Latin syntax, designed for those who have completed elementary and
intermediate classical Latin or the equivalent and
wish to study medieval Latin.
CLLA 40116. Medieval Latin
(3-0-3) Mantello
This course is an introduction to the Latin language
and literature of the late antique and medieval periods (ca. AD 200–1500). Designed to move students
toward independent work with medieval Latin
texts, the course will emphasize the close reading
and careful translation of a variety of representative
and word formation, orthography and pronunciation, morphology and syntax, and prose styles and
metrics. This course will also introduce the principal
areas of medieval Latin scholarship, including lexica,
bibliographies, great collections and repertories of
sources, and reference works for the study of Latin
works composed in the Middle Ages.
CLLA 40118. Paleography
(3-0-3) Mantello
This course is an introduction to the study of medieval writing materials and practices and of Latin
scripts from antiquity to the early Renaissance. Designed to provide students with the skills necessary to
make use of Latin manuscripts in their research, the
course will focus on practical exercises in identifying,
transcribing, dating and localizing the various scripts.
It will be of interest (1) to a wide variety of students
whose courses are centered in or touch upon the
Middle Ages and who wish to work with unpublished Latin materials of the medieval period; (2) to
professional Latinists and other humanists who study
the classical tradition and the transmission of texts
before the age of printing; and (3) to librarians and
others with an interest in manuscripts, diplomata,
incunabula, and rare books.
CLAS 13184. History University Seminar
CLLA 47001. Special Studies in Latin
Literature
(3-0-3) Schlegel
This course surveys the leading works of ancient
Greek literature and examines the cultural contexts
in which they were written, received, and transmitted. Students read poetry and prose from many
genres, and sample works from a thousand years of
extraordinary literary creativity. Among the authors
introduced are Homer, Sappho, Aeschylus, Herodotus, Aristophanes, Plato, Theocritus, Plutarch, Lucian, and Longus. Special attention is paid to the
formal structures of Greek literary works, the cultural issues they raise, and the lasting value of Greek
literature to the modern age. The course prepares
students for more advanced work in classical literature and culture. Offered annually.
(V-0-V)
Permission of the department required.
CLLA 47801. Special Studies
(V-0-V)
Individual or small group study under the direction
of a departmental faculty member.
Classics Courses in English
No prerequisites.
CLAS 10100. Ancient Greece and Rome
(3-0-3) Mazurek
This first-year course introduces the general history
and culture of ancient Greece and Rome to students
coming to the subject for the first time. Literary texts
central to the ancient Greek and Roman traditions
receive prime attention, including works by Homer,
Plato, Cicero, and Virgil, but students are also
exposed to the importance of learning from documentary texts, archeology, and art history. Topics
discussed include concepts of divinity and humanity,
heroism and virtue, gender, democracy, empire, and
civic identity, and how they changed in meaning
over time. The course allows students to develop a
rich appreciation for the Greek and Roman roots
of their own lives, and prepares them to study the
Greco-Roman past at more advanced levels. Offered
annually.
CLAS 10200. Greek and Roman Mythology
(3-0-3)
This first-year course introduces the mythologies
of Greece and Rome—some of the foundational
narratives of the Western literary and artistic tradition—and traces their transmission and influence
over two-and-a-half thousand years from ancient
to modern times. The course is particularly valuable as an initial course in the humanities because it
pays special attention to such current interpretative
theories as structuralism, psychoanalysis, feminism,
and post-modernism that allow the many meanings
of myths to be deciphered and understood. Offered
annually.
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the seminar method of instruction that introduces students to material life and culture of the Roman Empire and emphasizes research
methods as well as organization and composition of
written arguments.
CLAS 13186. Literature University Seminar
(3-0-3)
Introduces first-year students to the study of classical
literature on a comparative basis, with readings from
Greco-Roman and Arabic literature.
CLAS 30021. Greek Literature and Culture
CLAS 30022. Roman Literature and Culture
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the leading works of ancient Roman literature and examines the cultural contexts in
which they were written, received, and transmitted.
Students read poetry and prose from many genres,
and sample works from six hundred years of literary
versatility that combined enormous originality with a
literary tradition inherited from the Greeks. Among
the authors introduced are Plautus, Lucretius, Catullus, Cicero, Horace, Livy, Lucan, Tacitus, Apuleius,
Ammianus, and Augustine. Special attention is paid
the formal structures of Roman literary works, the
cultural issue they raise, and the lasting value of
Latin literature to the modern age. The course prepares students for more advanced study in classical
literature and culture. Offered annually.
CLAS 30105. The History of Ancient Greece
(3-0-3)
An outline introduction to the history of ancient
Greece from the Bronze Age to the Roman conquest.
The topics covered include the rise of the distinctive
Greek city-state (the ‘polis’), Greek relations with
Persia, Greek experiments with democracy, oligarchy, and empire, the great war between Athens and
Sparta, the rise to power of Philip and Alexander of
Macedon, and the Greeks’ eventual submission to
Rome. Readings include narrative, documentary, and
archaeological sources. The course prepares students
for advanced study in ancient history. Offered
biennially.
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CLAS 30110. Democracy and the Greeks
(3-0-3)
This course builds on CLAS 30105, The History
of Ancient Greece, and examines the theory, practice, and development of ancient Greek, especially
Athenian, democracy. Particular attention is devoted
to comparing ancient with modern forms of democracy. Among the special topics studied are the origins
of democracy, its advantages and disadvantages as a
form of government, Greek ideas of alternatives to
democracy, and democracy as an abiding legacy of
Greek civilization to the modern world.
CLAS 30120. The Greeks and Their Gods
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the varied and unique religious
beliefs and practices of the ancient Greeks. With the
aid of anthropological and comparative material on
religion from other cultures and societies, the course
stresses the intersection of religious conventions with
politics, gender, and class in the Greek city-states,
and gives special attention to the religious life of the
best documented Greek community of all, ancient
Athens.
CLAS 30205. The History of Ancient Rome
(3-0-3) Mazurek
An outline introduction to the history of ancient
Rome from Romulus to Constantine. The topics
covered include the meteoric spread of Roman rule
in the ancient Mediterranean, the brilliance of a
republican form of government tragically swept away
by destructive civil war, the rise of repressive autocracy under the Caesars, and the threats to empire in
late antiquity posed inside by the rise of Christianity
and outside by hostile invaders. Readings include
narrative, documentary, and archaeological sources.
The course prepares students for advanced study in
ancient history. Offered biennially.
CLAS 30210. Roman Law and Governance
to focus on one or two aspects of his achievement to
the exclusion of others. In this course, we will try to
understand how the different branches of Cicero’s
life and work fit together, why he thought that philosophy, law and religion were relevant to politics,
and why and how ethical considerations should condition one’s private and public life. In pursuing these
issues, we will think about Cicero’s intellectual and
political predecessors, both Greek and Roman, before reading a selection of his own writings. By way
of understanding some aspect of Cicero’s enormous
influence we will conclude with reading part of The
Federalist Papers.
CLAS 30330. The Greek and Latin Origins of
Medical Terminology
CLAS 30220. The Romans and Their Gods
(3-0-3)
This course traces the development of medicine in
the ancient Mediterranean world, concentrating on
the medical beliefs, theories, and practices of the
Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans. The course emphasizes the value of studying written sources such as the
Hippocratic treatises and the works of Galen with
artistic evidence and human remains. A connection
between ancient and modern medicine is made by
considering two contrasting models of disease—the
biomedical and the biopsychosocial—that figure as
the focus of a contemporary debate on health care.
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the way in which the Romans
conceived of, worshipped, and communicated with
the myriad gods of their pantheon. The course focuses first on conventional religious rituals and their
cultural meaning, and secondly on the success of Roman polytheism in adapting to changing historical
and social conditions. Particular attention is paid to
the so-called “mystery religions”, including Christianity, and their relationship to conventional forms of
Roman religious behavior.
CLAS 30225. Romans and Christians
(3-0-3)
The early development of the Christian religion in
its historical Roman context. The course surveys
the political, social, and administrative structures
of the Roman Empire, examines the complexity of
Rome’s religious life, and analyzes the rise of the
Jesus movement and Rome’s reaction to it. Particular
topics studied include pagan and Christian magic
and miracle-working, the sectarian and subversive
character of early Christianity, martyrdom and persecution, and Constantine’s emergence as Rome’s first
Christian emperor.
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the nature and influence of Roman law, one of the most celebrated and distinctive
elements of ancient Roman culture. The course
surveys the development of Roman civil and criminal law from the very early and enigmatic Twelve
Tables to the very late and amazingly great Digest of
Justinian. Topics covered include legal procedures,
the creation of law, and Roman jurisprudence, all
of which are studied in the broad context of Roman
government and administration. The lasting effects
of Roman law on modern legal systems are also
considered.
CLAS 30315. Sex and Gender in GrecoRoman Antiquity
CLAS 30214. Cicero and Political Tradition
CLAS 30320. Family and Household in GrecoRoman Antiquity
(3-0-3)
The life and writings of Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–
43 BC) have been studied in light of the different aspects of his eventful career as a lawyer and advocate,
orator, politician, statesman, and philosopher. His
surviving writings—political and judicial speeches,
treatises on religion, law, ethics, political philosophy
and rhetoric, and also many personal letters—shed
light on the diverse successes and reversals of his
public and private life. Those who study Cicero tend
(3-0-3)
This course examines the differing roles and stereotypes, forms of behavior, and values associated with
women and men in Greco-Roman antiquity. Special
attention is given to the preoccupations of the
Greeks and Romans with the categories of “female”
and “male” and to the dynamics of relations and relationships between women and men. The course both
deepens knowledge of Greco-Roman society and
provides an informed background for contemporary
gender debates.
(3-0-3)
A survey of the life-course in Roman antiquity. Topics studied will include marriage, divorce, child-rearing, old age, the way in which family and household
were conceptualized by the Romans, and the demography of the Roman world.
(3-0-3)
This course offers an introduction to the ancient
Greek and Latin languages that enables students to
decipher the arcane and often perplexing vocabulary
of modern medicine. Basic linguistic concepts are explained, the manner in which medical terms are constructed from Greek and Latin roots is analyzed, and
appropriate contextual material on ancient medicine
is provided. This is a course of great practical value,
not least for the attention it pays to human anatomy.
CLAS 30335. The History of Ancient Medicine
CLAS 30360. Words and/of Power: The
Theory and Practice of Persuasive Speech in
Greece and Rome
(3-0-3)
Rhetoric occupied a prominent place in the democracy of the Athenians and in the republican era of
Roman history. This course examines the theory,
practice and context of ancient rhetoric, and pays
special attention to developments caused by radical
changes in the political character of the Athenian
and Roman civic communities. Representative readings from Greek and Roman orators and writers on
rhetorical theory.
CLAS 30365. The Art and Literature of
Metamorphoses
(3-0-3) Bloomer
This course begins with a critical study of Ovid’s
great poem, the Metamorphoses. The poem itself
became a subject of metamorphosis in poetry and art
in the hands of such figures as Statius, Dante, Botticelli, Bernini, Rembrandt, Hughes, and Heaney.
The course addresses the modeling of transformation
within the literary text by examining first Ovid and
his sources, and second, adaptations of his poem by
writers such as Shakespeare and Kafka. Connections
with folklore, magic, and religion are explored. The
graphic arts receive equal consideration as the course
explores how Ovid’s ideas of the transformation of
the body, the capacity of the human body for allegory, and the fragility of identity have influenced
later artists and authors.
CLAS 30405. Survey: Greek Art/Architecture
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. This course analyzes and
traces the development of Greek architecture, painting, and sculpture in the historical period from
the eighth through second century BC, with some
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consideration of prehistoric Greek forebears of the
Mycenaean Age. Particular emphasis is placed upon
monumental art, its historical and cultural contexts,
and how it reflects changing attitudes toward the
gods, human achievement, and the relationship between the divine and the human.
CLAS 30410. Hellenistic and Roman Art and
Architecture
(3-0-3) Rhodes
This course explores the architecture, urban planning, sculpture, and painting of Hellenistic Greece
and Rome, from the time of Alexander the Great in
the fourth century BCE to the reign of the Roman
emperor Constantine in the fourth century CE.
The art and architecture of Greece and Rome will
be analyzed as expressions of their culture and time
and as tools for understanding those cultures more
completely. A variety of themes will be addressed,
including changing conceptions of monumentality
in art and architecture; imperial propaganda in art,
architecutre and religion; technology as inspiration
for new conceptions of art and architecture; the contrasting natures of Greek and Roman art and culture;
the influence of Greek culture upon Rome; and the
nature and significance of the ever-changing mixture
of Greek and native Italic elements in Roman art and
architecture.
CLAS 30431. The Art of Mythology
(3-0-3)
This cross-disciplinary course explores representations of classical myth in Western literature and art
from the seventh century BC to the 18th century
of the modern era. Literary and visual narratives are
compared and contrasted, and the procedures of
poets, philosophers, artists, sculptors, and architects
in selecting and adapting mythological subjects
are analyzed. The course raises questions about the
connections between myth and political power, and
about such major concepts as heroism, metamorphosis, and earthly and divine love. Readings from classical sources on Greek myths, and special attention
to such works of art as Raphael’s Roman cycles and
Bernini’s sculpted dramas.
CLAS 34208. The Conquered and the Proud
(3-0-3)
How did Rome become ruler of the greater part
of the known world, establishing an empire which
would endure for many centuries? This course will
examine the causes and nature of Roman imperialism and seek to explain their success in war-making
and in particular their ability to absorb other cultures. It will begin with the period immediately after
the first two wars with Carthage, conflicts which for
the first time led the Romans to send armies outside
Italy, then follow the decline of the Republican system and the establishment of the rule of emperors
who were monarchs in all but name, and discuss the
trends which would eventually radically alter this
system and move the centre of power away from the
City of Rome. These changes will be placed firmly in
the context of Roman aggressive warfare and the development in attitudes towards further expansion as
well as the evolving nature and role of the army. The
impact of Roman conquest and administration on
the provinces of the empire will be discussed, in particular the cultural and social changes inaugurated
by Roman rule. Extensive use will be made of the
literary sources for the period, including narrative
histories, biographies, political speeches and poetry
(all read in translation), supported by the evidence of
archaeology, art and architecture. Visits to museums
and sites in Britain will form part of the course.
CLAS 40360. Humor and Violence in Western
Culture
CLAS 40125. Classical Greek Tragedy
(3-0-3)
Seminar on specific subjects in Greek and/or Roman
art. Variable content.
(3-0-3) McLaren
This advanced course in literature provides detailed
study of the theory and practice of classical Greek
tragedy. The structures and sensibilities that inform
tragedy are assessed, with special attention to plays
written by the three great tragedians, Aeschylus,
Sophocles, and Euripides. The Greeks’ own responses
to tragedy, as represented by Aristophanes, Plato and
Aristotle, are also discussed. The form and function
of Greek tragic plays, their place in classical culture,
and their distinctive approach to issues of human life
are key topics of the course.
CLAS 40130. Socrates and Athens
(3-0-3)
This course examines the moral upheaval evident
in classical Athens during the Peloponnesian War,
the great fifth-century struggle between Athens and
Sparta and their respective satellites. The history of
Thucydides, the comedies of Aristophanes, and the
tragedies of Euripides and Sophocles provide the basic reading. The course also draws on some of Plato’s
writings to assess Socrates’ reaction to the Athenian
moral crisis.
CLAS 40350. The Myths of the Greeks and
Romans
(3-0-3)
This advanced course investigates the mythologies
of Greece and Rome and traces their transmission to
and influence on modern literature and art. Special
attention is given to the wide range of media in
which ancient stories about gods and heroes were
expressed and communicated, and to the process
by which these marvelous stories survived in later
literature and the visual arts, inspiring writers and
artists to adapt them to their own purposes. Current
interpretative theories at the forefront of scholarship
in the humanities are explored for their value in
interpreting myths.
CLAS 40355. Greek and Roman Epic Poetry
(3-0-3)
This advanced course in literature provides detailed
study of the major epic poems of the classical literary
tradition: the Iliad and Odyssey of Homer, the Aeneid
of Virgil, and the Metamorphoses of Ovid. Discussion
centers on the cultural contexts in which the works
were written or produced, and the literary conventions on which they rely for their ever-appealing
aesthetic and emotional power.
(3-0-3)
This course explores the relationship between humor
and violence in Western cultural history from GrecoRoman antiquity to the present. It takes as a guiding premise the idea that humor is a response and
antidote to violence and suffering, and pursues the
theme in a wide range of literary works and films.
The course is linked to History 30350.
CLAS 40407. Seminar: Greek and/or Roman
Art
CLAS 47801. Special Studies
(3-0-3)
Permission of the department required.
CLAS 50100. Honors Seminar
(3-0-3) Schlegel
This course is offered each fall semester and is a
requirement for all majors in Classics and Greek and
Roman Civilization who wish to receive an honors
degree. The specific content of the seminar varies
from year to year, but its broad purpose is to introduce students to scholarly methods of research, and
through research to reflect on the value of studying
classical antiquity.
CLAS 50400. Topics in Greek and/or Roman
Art
(3-0-3) Rhodes
Topics course on special areas of Greek and/or
Roman art.
ProgRam in Semitic
Languages
Courses in Arabic, Syriac, and Hebrew offer instruction in the languages, literatures, and cultures of
the Middle East. The study of these languages is necessary for an understanding of Semitic culture and as
background for the development of Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Middle Eastern contacts with the
Classical world, with Africa, Europe, and America.
In recent years, the West has become increasingly
aware of the Arabic-speaking East. Courses in Arabic language and literature are a prerequisite for an
understanding of the rise of Islam, the literature it
produced, and subsequent developments among Arabic-speaking Muslems and Christians.
Courses in Syriac taught at the graduate level are
available to qualified undergraduates by permission.
Course Descriptions. The following course descriptions give the number, the title, and a brief characterization of each course. Lecture or class hours
per week, tutorial hours per week, and credits each
semester are in parentheses. Not all of these courses
are offered every year.
108
classics
CLSS 10111. Introduction to Syriac Grammar
(10-0-3) Amar
An intensive, three-week introduction to the grammar of Syriac. The course introduces students to the
basic reading, grammar, and structures of the language. Texts include T.E. Robinson’s Paradigms and
Exercises in Syriac Grammar, which is supplemented
with a specially developed course packet, and J.H.
Eaton’s Horizons in Semitic Languages. This course is
taught during the summer.
CLSS 10115. Introduction to Syriac Reading
(10-0-3) Saadi
An intensive introduction to basic prose reading
in Syriac. Texts include: excerpts from the Peshitta
Gospels, the teaching of the Apostle Addai, and the
Life of Ephrem the Syrian. This course is taught during the summer. It is highly recommended that this
course is to be taken immediately following MESY
10111.
CLSS 20120. Intermediate Syriac Reading
(10-0-3) Amar
Continues the work of MESY 10115 by introducing students to the reading of semi-vocalized and
unvocalized texts. Texts include: excerpts from
Aphrahat, Ephrem, Jacob of Sarug, John of Apamaea,
Bar Hebraeus.
Arabic Major
4 semesters of Arabic
12
2 literature courses in Classics
taught by the Arabic faculty
6
2 courses in Middle East history
6
1 course in Islam
3
1 elective, subject to departmental approval
3
————
30
Mediterranean/Middle East Area Studies Minor
This is a broad-based program that includes all
aspects of the ancient and modern cultures that
surround the Mediterranean. Courses from three
regions apply. In Europe, this includes the study of
Classical Greece and Rome as well as modern Italy,
France, Spain, and Portugal in Europe. Courses on
the Middle East are related to the study of Semitic
peoples and their cultures, languages, religions, and
politics. In North Africa, Arab, and Francophone
history and civilization are the focus.
Students are required to fulfill a sequence of 12
credits (four courses distributed over the area). In
addition, they are required to write a major research
essay under the direction of one of the advisors for
three credits.
ARABIC
MEAR 10001. First-Year Arabic I
(3-0-3)
This two-semester sequence of courses is a basic
introduction to all aspects of the Arabic language
through a comprehensive and integrated method.
The focus is on language proficiency in all areas of
the language including speaking, reading, and writing. The course also introduces students to aspects of
Arabic culture and everyday life in the Middle East.
MEAR 10001 is offered each spring semester and
MEAR 10002 is offered each fall semester.
will cover the textbook materials, in addition to the
basic grammar and the cumulative vocabulary.
MEAR 10002. First-Year Arabic II
(3-0-3) Saadi
Prerequisite(s): MEAR 30005 or MEAR 105 or
MEAR 301 or MEAR 410
This third-year Arabic course emphasis is on developing listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills
in interactive settings. Vocabulary building will be
the focus of drills; we will cover basic vocabulary
in various authentic uses of the language. Special
attention will also be given to media Arabic. Basic
Arabic grammar should be completed by the end of
the year. We will continue with Part 2 of the Kitaab
sequence. Supplementary materials, mainly from
Arabic media (BBC Arabic News, newspapers, magazines), will be provided. Tests, both oral and written,
will cover the textbook materials, in addition to the
basic grammar and the cumulative vocabulary.
(3-0-3) Guo, Saadi
Prerequisite(s): MEAR 10001 or MEAR 101
This two-semester sequence of courses is a basic
introduction to all aspects of the Arabic language
through a comprehensive and integrated method.
The focus is on language proficiency in all areas of
the language including speaking, reading, and writing. The course also introduces students to aspects of
Arabic culture and everyday life in the Middle East.
MEAR 10001 is offered each spring semester and
MEAR 10002 is offered each fall semester.
MEAR 10101. Introduction to Modern
Standard Arabic
(15-0-3) Saadi
Prerequisite(s): MEAR 10101 or MEAR 200
This intensive summer course is a basic introduction to all aspects of the Arabic language through a
comprehensive and integrated method. The focus is
on language proficiency in all areas of the language
including speaking, reading, and writing. The course
also introduces students to aspects of Arabic culture
and everyday life in the Middle East. No
prerequisite.
MEAR 20003. Second-Year Arabic I
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): MEAR 10002 or MEAR 102
This second-year Arabic course builds on the previous two semesters. The emphasis is on speaking and
writing for self-expression with continued study of
the basic grammatical structures. Proficiency remains
the focus through readings and conversations in the
language. Students develop skill in the use of the
Arabic dictionary.
MEAR 20004. Second-Year Arabic II
(3-0-3) Saadi
Prerequisite(s): MEAR 20003 or MEAR 103
This course is geared to consolidating skills gained
in the previous three semesters while enhancing the
ability to converse and conduct oneself in Arabic.
Reading skills are enhanced by exposure to more
sophisticated examples of literature. Original written
expression is encouraged through the composition of
short essays.
MEAR 30005. Third-Year Arabic I
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): MEAR 20004 or MEAR 104
This third-year Arabic course emphasis is on developing listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills
in interactive settings. Vocabulary building will be
the focus of drills; we will cover basic vocabulary
in various authentic uses of the language. Special
attention will also be given to media Arabic. Basic
Arabic grammar should be completed by the end of
the year. We will continue with part 2 of the Kitaab
sequence. Supplementary materials, mainly from
Arabic media (BBC Arabic News, newspapers, magazines), will be provided. Tests, both oral and written,
MEAR 30006. Third-Year Arabic II
MEAR 47001. Special Studies
(3-0-3)
Permission of the department required.
MEAR 47801. Special Studies
(3-0-3)
Individual or small group study under the direction
of a departmental faculty member.
COURSES IN ENGLISH
MELC 10101. Introduction to Arabic Culture
and Civilization
(3-0-3) Amar
This course is an introductory survey of Arabic
culture and civilization from the pre-Islamic era to
the conquest of Constantinople in 1453. The course
will trace the origins of the Arab people and their
distinctive culture and literature. The revelation of
the Qur’an to the Prophet Muhammad and subsequent development of Islam will be treated in detail.
Following this, the course will focus on the spread
of Islamic civilization, its interactions with other
cultures, and its contributions to scholarship in the
areas of literature, art, and architecture. This course
will satisfy the University literature requirement.
MELC 13186. Literature University Seminar in
English
(3-0-3)
Introduces first-year students to the study of classical
literature on a comparative basis, with readings from
Greco-Roman and Arabic literature.
MELC 20020. Revelation to Revolution
(3-0-3)
This basic introduction to Arabic literature links the
phenomenon of “literature” to the larger world of
Islamic studies. The course emphasizes connections
between Arabic literary tradition and that of other
Semitic and Western traditions. Topics include: the
idea of scripture, “Falasuufs” and the Renaissance,
the literature of empire, Al-Andanus-Muslim Spain,
mytho-poetics, rogues, and scoundrels. All readings
are in English.
109
classics
MELC 20040. Islamic Societies of the Middle
East and North Africa: Religion, History, and
Culture
(3-0-3) Afsaruddin
This course is an introductory survey of the Islamic
societies of the Middle East and North Africa from
their origins to the present day. It will deal with the
history and expansion of Islam, both as a world religion and civilization, from its birth in the Arabian
Peninsula in the seventh century to its subsequent
spread to other parts of western Asia and North
Africa. Issues of religious and social ethics, political
governance, gender, social relations and cultural
practices will be explored in relation to a number
of Muslim societies in the region, such as in Egypt,
Morocco, and Iran. The course foregrounds the
diversity and complexities present in a critical area of
what we call the Islamic world today.
MELC 20050. The Ancient Middle East
(3-0-3)
Discover the origins of human civilization, the first
written language, and the myths that revolutionized
religion. This is an introduction to the civilizations
of Mesopotamia that formed the basis of the way we
think, see reality, believe, and express ourselves today.
Topics include: Sumerians, Akkadians, and Babylonians; Phoenicians, Aramaic, and the beginnings of
law, literature, and legend.
MELC 20060. Islam: Religion and Culture
(3-0-3)
This introductory course will discuss the rise of Islam
in the Arabian Peninsula in the seventh century of
the Common Era and its subsequent establishment
as a major world religion and civilization. Lectures
and readings will deal with the life of the Prophet
Muhammad, the Qur’an and its role in worship and
society, early Islamic history, community formation,
law and religious practices, theology, mysticism, and
literature. Emphasis will be on the core beliefs and
institutions of Islam and on its religious and political thought from the Middle Ages until our own
time. The latter part of this course will deal with
the spread of Islam to the West, resurgent trends
within Islam, both in their reformist and extremist
forms, and contemporary Muslim engagements with
modernity.
MELC 20070. Introduction to Islamic
Civilization
(3-0-3)
This course is designed to introduce students to
Islamic civilization and Muslim culture and societies. The course will cover the foundations of Islamic
belief, worship, and institutions, along with the
evolution of sacred law (Al-shari’a) and theology, as
well as various aspects of intellectual activities. The
Koran and the life of the Prophet Muhammad will
be examined in detail. Both Sunni and Shi’i perspectives will be considered. Major Sufi personalities will
be discussed to illuminate the mystical, and popular,
tradition in Islam. Topics on arts, architecture, literary culture, and sciences will be covered. Although
the course is concerned more with the history of
ideas than with modern Islam as such, it has great
relevance for understanding contemporary Muslim
attitudes and political, social, and cultural trends in
the Muslim world today.
MELC 30030. Love, Death, and Exile in Arabic
Literature and Cinema
(3-0-3) Guo
This course explores literary and artistic presentation
of the themes of “love, death, and exile” in Arabic
literature and popular culture from pre-Islamic era
to the present day. Through close readings of Arabic
poetry, essays, short stories, and novels (in English
translation), and analyzing a number of Arabic movies (with English subtitles), we discuss the following
issues: themes and genres of classical Arabic love
poetry; gender, eroticism, and sexuality in Arabic literary discourse; alienation, fatalism, and the motif of
al-hanin ila al-watan (nostalgia for one’s homeland)
in modern Arabic poetry and fiction.
MELC 30040. Christianity in the Middle East
(3-0-3)
The spread of Christianity from Palestine to the
West is well-documented. Less well-known is the development of Christianity in the lands of its origin,
the Middle East. This course introduces students to
the largely untold story of Christianity that expresses
itself in the native Aramaic language and culture
of the Semitic East. The origins of the indigenous
Christian churches of Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, and Iran.
The development of these traditions will be viewed
in relation to western/European forms of Christianity that have come to be viewed as mainstream and
normative. The course concludes with an assessment
of the impact of religious “fundamentalisms,” the
diaspora of Middle Eastern Christians throughout
Europe and the United States, and the contemporary
state of Christianity in the Middle East.
MELC 30050. Canon and Literature of Islam
(3-0-3) Afsaruddin
This course is an introduction to the fundamental
religious texts and literature of Islam. The list includes the Qur’an (the central, sacred scripture of Islam), the hadith (record of the speech and actions of
the Prophet Muhammad), biography of the Prophet,
exegetical literature, historical texts, mystical and
devotional literature. Students will read primary texts
in English translation with a focused discussion and
analysis of form, content, historical background,
religious significance, and literary allusions of the
various texts. Themes such as “the unity and majesty
of God;” “prophecy and revelation;” “good and evil;”
“this world and the hereafter” will be dealt with in
the lectures and conversation in class. The course
lays heavy emphasis on class discussion and student
preparedness.
HEBREW
MEHE 10001. Elementary Biblical Hebrew I
(3-0-3)
This is a two-semester introductory course in biblical
Hebrew; under normal circumstances, the student
must complete the first to enroll in the second. The
fall semester will be devoted to learning the grammar of biblical Hebrew. The spring semester will be
divided into two parts. For the first six weeks we will
finish and review the grammar. In the remaining part
of the course we will read and translate texts from
the Hebrew Bible, Qumran, and Rabbinic literature.
The course will focus on developing reading and
comprehension skills in biblical Hebrew through
the study of biblical texts. In addition, students will
learn how to use reference grammars, concordances,
and apparatus to the Biblia Hebraica. The course
encourages students to think about the grammatical
forms and their implications for biblical
interpretation.
MEHE 10002. Elementary Biblical Hebrew II
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): MEHE 10001 or MEHE 48)
This is a two-semester introductory course in biblical
Hebrew; under normal circumstances, the student
must complete the first to enroll in the second. The
fall semester will be devoted to learning the grammar of biblical Hebrew. The spring semester will be
divided into two parts. For the first six weeks we will
finish and review the grammar. In the remaining part
of the course we will read and translate texts from
the Hebrew Bible, Qumran, and Rabbinic literature.
The course will focus on developing reading and
comprehension skills in biblical Hebrew through
the study of biblical texts. In addition, students will
learn how to use reference grammars, concordances,
and apparatus to the Biblia Hebraica. The course
encourages students to think about the grammatical
forms and their implications for biblical
interpretation.
MEHE 10111. Intensive Elementary Hebrew
(10-0-3) Machiela
This six-week intensive language course will be devoted to learning the grammar of biblical Hebrew.
Throughout the course we will focus on developing
reading and comprehension skills in biblical Hebrew
through the study of biblical texts. In addition,
students will learn how to use reference grammars,
concordances, and apparatus to the Biblia Hebraica.
The course encourages students to think about the
grammatical forms and their implications for biblical
interpretation.
MEHE 47001. Special Studies, Hebrew
(3-0-3)
Permission of the department required.
110
east asian languages and literatures
East Asian Languages
and Literatures
Chair:
Lionel M. Jensen
Research Professor:
Howard Goldblatt
Visiting Professor:
Bai Dao
Associate Professors:
Michael C. Brownstein; Liangyan Ge; Lionel
M. Jensen; Xiaoshan Yang
Assistant Professors:
Sylvia Li-chun Lin
Visiting Assistant Professor:
Heather Bowen-Struyk; Jonathan Noble
Associate Professional Specialists:
Noriko Hanabusa; Setsuko Shiga
Assistant Professional Specialist:
Chengxu Yin
The peoples of East Asia comprise one quarter of the
world’s population and account for a similar proportion of the world’s production and consumption.
This, along with the contemporary fusion of Asia
and the West politically and economically, makes
knowledge of the diverse languages and cultures of
East Asia vital to an understanding of our global
community and indispensable for the preparation of
careers in the Pacific Rim focusing on business, public policy, literatures, and the arts. The Department
of East Asian Languages and Literatures provides
the resources and instruction necessary for success
in all of these fields. The department is dedicated
to providing rigorous language training in Chinese
and Japanese, as well as courses taught in English on
Chinese and Japanese philosophy, religion, literature,
and culture. Complementary courses in other disciplines are listed in this Bulletin under departments
such as history, philosophy, theology, political science, economics, and anthropology.
Program in Chinese
The program in Chinese offers language classes in
Mandarin Chinese at the beginning, first-, second-,
third-, and fourth-year levels, as well as courses in
English on classical and modern Chinese literature
and culture. Qualified students also have the opportunity to attend East China Normal University in
Shanghai, People’s Republic of China.
The Chinese program offers first and supplementary
majors and a minor.
Basic requirements: For the major, students must
complete 30 credit hours, including Third-Year
Chinese. For the supplementary major, students
must complete 24 credit hours, including Third-Year
Chinese. For the minor, students must complete 15
credit hours, including two semesters of language
classes beyond the first year 10000-level language
courses and University Seminars on China related
topics do not count toward the major, supplementary major, or minor.
Other requirements: In addition to the language
course requirements described above, First and Supplementary majors as well as the Minor also requires
one course in Chinese literature. Remaining credit
hours may be satisfied by taking additional Chinese
language and literature courses, or East Asia-related
courses approved by the academic advisor.
Program in Japanese
The program in Japanese offers language classes in
modern Japanese at the beginning, intermediate
and advanced levels, as well as courses in English on
classical and modern Japanese literature and culture.
Qualified students also have the opportunity to attend Nanzan University in Nagoya, Japan.
The Japanese program offers first and supplementary
majors and a minor.
Completion of First-Year Chinese or Japanese (10
credits) or Beginning Chinese or Japanese (nine
credits) will satisfy the language requirement for
both the College of Arts and Letters and the College
of Science. Although the College of Business does
not have a language requirement, it strongly supports
integration of language courses into its curriculum
and encourages students to participate in the International Study Programs (See “International Study
Programs” under Mendoza College of Business).
Basic requirements: For the major, students must
complete 30 credit hours, including 22 credits
in language classes beyond the first year. For the
supplementary major, students must complete 24
credit hours, including 16 credits in language classes
beyond the first year. For the minor, students must
complete 15 credit hours including two semesters
of language classes beyond the first year. 10000level language courses and University Seminars on
Japan related topics do not count toward the major,
supplementary major, or minor. Placement and Language Requirement. Students
who wish to enroll in a Chinese or Japanese language course beyond the 10101 or 10102 level must
take a placement examination administered by the
Department. Students testing out of 10000-level
language courses must complete at least one course
at the 20000 level or higher to satisfy the language
requirement.
Other requirements: In addition to the language
course requirements described above, first and supplementary majors as well as the minor also require
one course in Japanese literature. Remaining credit
hours may be satisfied by taking additional Japanese
language and literature courses, or East Asia-related
courses approved by the academic advisor.
Asian Studies Minor
See “Area Studies Minors,” later in this section of
the Bulletin. This minor provides opportunities for
students to develop an interdisciplinary understanding of Asia.
Shanghai and Nagoya
Programs
The Shanghai and Nagoya programs provide students with the opportunity to spend an academic
year at Nanzan University in Nagoya, Japan, or a
semester or academic year at East China Normal
University in Shanghai, People’s Republic of China.
To qualify for the Shanghai Program, students must
complete at least one semester of Chinese language
study at Notre Dame with at least a 3.0 grade point
average in the language courses. For the Nagoya
Program, at least one year of Japanese language studies at Notre Dame with a 3.0 grade point average or
better in the language courses is required. Students
may attend Nanzan or East China Normal during their sophomore or junior year. Students who
intend to combine a First or Supplementary major
in Chinese or Japanese with a major in another discipline and who intend to apply for the Shanghai or
Nagoya programs are urged to plan their course of
studies carefully in consultation with their advisors
prior to applying for either program. For more information and course listings, see “Nagoya Program”
or “Shanghai Program” under “International Study
Programs” in this Bulletin.
Course Descriptions. The following course descriptions give the number, title and brief characterization
of each course. Lecture or class hours per week, laboratory or tutorial hours per week, and credits each
semester are in parentheses. Not all of these courses
are offered every year.
Chinese Language Courses
EALC 10101. Beginning Chinese I
(3-0-3)
For students with no background in Chinese. A
three-semester sequence of three-credit courses covering the same material as 111–112 and designed
to prepare students to enter 211. 101 and 103 are
offered only in the spring semester, 102 only in the
fall. Equal emphasis on the basic skills of listening,
speaking, reading, and writing.
EALC 10102. Beginning Chinese II
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALC 10101 or EALC 101
For students with no background in Chinese. A
three-semester sequence of three-credit courses covering the same material as 10111–10112 and designed
to prepare students to enter 20211. 10101 and
10103 are offered only in the spring semester, 10102
only in the fall. Equal emphasis on the basic skills of
listening, speaking, reading, and writing.
EALC 10103. Beginning Chinese III
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALC 10102 or EALC 102
For students with no background in Chinese. A
three-semester sequence of three-credit courses
covering the same material as 10111–10112 and
111
east asian languages and literatures
designed to prepare students to enter 10211. 10101
and 10103 are offered only in the spring semester,
10102 only in the fall. Equal emphasis on the basic
skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing.
Students may expect to master a spoken vocabulary
of about 1,000 words and a written vocabulary of
500 characters.
comparable to those who finish three years of Chinese at Notre Dame. They will be able to advance
to fourth-year Chinese, in which students learn to
read authentic texts written for native speakers of
Chinese. Three class hours plus two additional lab
hours are required.
EALC 10111. First-Year Chinese I
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALC 20212 or EALC 212
The course focuses on the development of advanced
conversational, reading, and writing skills, using a
wide range of authentic materials, including material
from news media.
(5-0-5)
A course designed for students who have not studied
Chinese before. Equal emphasis is placed on the
basic languages skills in speaking, listening, reading,
and writing. Students will learn both the Chinese
Romanization system of the pinyin and written
characters, and to perform conversational skills in
daily-life situations.
EALC 10112. First-Year Chinese II
(5-0-5)
Prerequisite(s): EALC 10111 or EALC 111
Continuation of First Year Chinese I. Equal emphasis is placed on the basic languages skills in speaking,
listening, reading, and writing. Students will learn
both the Chinese Romanization system of the pinyin
and written characters, and to perform conversational skills in daily life situations. By the end of the
course they are expected to have mastered a spoken
vocabulary of about 1,000 words and 500 written
characters.
EALC 20211. Second-Year Chinese I
(5-0-5)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Grammar review and training in the four basic skills
to higher levels of sophistication: oral-aural skills for
fluency in communication, reading for critical understanding, and the ability to write simple
compositions.
EALC 20212. Second-Year Chinese II
(5-0-5)
Prerequisite(s): EALC 20211 or EALC 211
Continuation of Second-Year Chinese I. Grammar
review and training in the four basic skills to higher
levels of sophistication: oral-aural skills for fluency in
communication, reading for critical understanding,
and the ability to write simple compositions
EALC 30302. Chinese for a New Era
(3-2-5)
This is a course designed expressly for students with
previous exposure to Chinese, thus the only prerequisite for this course is placement by proficiency
examination. Chinese for a New Era is intended for
that diverse array of students who have some basic
speaking and listening skills and perhaps some background in writing or reading. Owing to the linguistic
heterogeneity of students with previous exposure to
Chinese, this course will expose students to material suitable to their language proficiency. They will
further develop their spoken skills by discussing
complex and abstract concepts, while learning to
read and write formal Chinese. After completing
this course, their language proficiency in the four
skills (listening, reading, speaking, writing) will be
EALC 30311. Third-Year Chinese I
EALC 30312. Third-Year Chinese II
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALC 30311 or EALC 311
Continuation of Third-Year Chinese I. The course
focuses on the development of advanced conversational, reading, and writing skills, using a wide range
of authentic materials, including material from news
media.
EALC 40411. Fourth-Year Chinese I
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALC 30312 or EALC 312
The course focuses on the practice in advanced conversational, reading, and writing skills, using newspapers, short fiction, videotapes, and other types of
authentic materials.
EALC 40412. Fourth-Year Chinese II
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALC 40411 or EALC 411
Continuation of Fourth-Year Chinese I. The course
focuses on the practice in advanced conversational,
reading, and writing skills, using newspapers, short
fiction, videotapes, and other types of authentic
materials.
EALC 40498. Special Studies
(V-0-V)
Requires “contractual agreement” with the professor
prior to scheduling. For advanced students who wish
to pursue an independent research project reading
Chinese language materials.
Japanese Language
Courses
EALJ 10101. Beginning Japanese I
(3-0-3)
A three-semester sequence of three-credit courses
covering the same material as 10211–10112 and
designed to prepare students to enter 20211. Courses
10101 and 10103 are offered only in the spring
semester, 10102 only in the fall. Introduction to the
fundamentals of modern Japanese. Equal emphasis
on speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Introduction of the hiragana and katakana syllabaries, and
200 kanji.
EALJ 10102. Beginning Japanese II
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALJ 10101 or EALJ 101
A three-semester sequence of three-credit courses
covering the same material as 10111–10112 and
designed to prepare students to enter 20211. Courses
10101 and 10103 are offered only in the spring semester, 10102 only in the fall. The goal of this class
is to gain an acquisition of the four basic language
skills in Japanese-reading, writing, speaking, and
listening. Students will learn to read and write Hiragana and Katakana (Japanese alphabetical systems),
and to perform such conversational skills as greeting
someone, introducing oneself, describing things,
places, and people. This course covers Chapters 1–4
in Nakama I.
EALJ 10103. Beginning Japanese III
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALJ 10102 or EALJ 102
A three-semester sequence of three-credit courses
covering the same material as 10111–10112 and
designed to prepare students to enter 20211. Courses
10101 and 10103 are offered only in the spring
semester, 10102 only in the fall. Introduction to the
fundamentals of modern Japanese. Equal emphasis
on speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Introduction of the hiragana and katakana syllabaries, and
200 kanji.
EALJ 10211. First-Year Japanese I
(5-0-5)
This course is designed for students who have not
studied Japanese language before. The goal of this
class is to gain an acquisition of the four basic language skills in Japanese—reading, writing, speaking
and listening. Students will learn to read and write
Hiragana and Katakana (Japanese alphabetical systems), and to perform such conversational skills as
greeting someone, introducing oneself, telling time,
etc. This course covers Chapters 1–6 in Nakama I.
EALJ 10212. First-Year Japanese II
(5-0-5)
Prerequisite(s): EALJ 10211 or EALJ 111
Introduction to the fundamentals of Japanese. Equal
emphasis on the four skills: speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Introduction of the hiragana and
katakana syllabaries, and 200 kanji.
EALJ 11001. Basic Japanese for Travel and
Business
(6-0-3)
This course isdesigned for students who wish to
learn basic Japanese for use in travel and business
situations in Japan or with Japanese clients in the
US. The goal of this class is to learn some basic
conversational skills in Japanese, plus some reading
and writing skills. Students will learn to read and
write Hiragana and Katakana (Japanese alphabetical
systems), as well as some simple Kanji (Chinese characters), and to perform such conversational skills as
greeting a client or shopkeeper, introducing oneself,
asking for directions, and making purchases. Regular
attendance required.
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EALJ 20211. Second-Year Japanese I
(5-0-5)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course is designed for students who have completed First Year Japanese or its equivalent. Students
will build on their acquisition of the four basic
language skills-reading, writing, speaking and listening. Mastery of Hiragana and Katakana is assumed;
approximately 40 new kanji will be introduced.
Conversational skills will include expressing likes and
dislikes, discussing past and future actions, and making purchases at a store. This course covers Chapters
5–8 in Nakama I.
EALJ 20212. Second-Year Japanese II
(5-0-5)
Prerequisite(s): EALJ 20211 or EALJ 211
This course has continued training in the fundamentals of the modern language. Equal emphasis on the
four skills: speaking, listening, reading, and writing.
Introduction to approximately 200 kanji.
EALJ 30311. Third-Year Japanese I
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALJ 20212 or EALJ 212
A course designed for students who have completed
EALJ 20212 or its equivalent. Students will build
on their acquisition of the four basic language
skills—reading, writing, speaking and listening.
Approximately 50 new Kanji will be introduced.
Conversational skills will include ordering food at
a restaurant, describing ailments to a doctor, and
talking about family members. This course covers
Chapters 9–12 in Nakama I.
EALJ 30312. Third-Year Japanese II
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALJ 30311 or EALJ 311
The first in a sequence of intermediate courses offered for those students who did not participate in
the Year-in-Japan Program. Development of oral-aural skills with an emphasis on typical conversational
situations. Improvement of reading and writing
skills.
EALJ 40411. Fourth-Year Japanese I
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALJ 30312 or EALJ 312
This is a course for students who have completed
EALJ 312 or its equivalent. Students will build
on their acquisition of the four basic language
skills—reading, writing, speaking and listening.
Approximately 100 new kanji compounds will be
introduced. Conversational skills include making
travel plans and reservations, describing physical ailments, and discussing complaints and problems with
a host family. This course covers parts of Chapters
10–12 in Chuukyuu No Nihongo (An Integrated Approach to Intermediate Japanese), supplemented with
authentic materials such as newspaper articles, video
clips, and songs.
EALJ 40412. Fourth-Year Japanese II
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALJ 40411 or EALJ 411
The second in a sequence of intermediate courses
for those students who did not participate in the
Year-in-Japan Program. Aimed at achieving a high
proficiency in the four skills: speaking, listening,
reading, and writing.
EALJ 40421. Advanced Japanese I
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): EALJ 40412 or EALJ 412
Advanced Japanese is a three-credit course for
students who have completed EALJ 40412, IJ 500
(Intensive Japanese 500) in the Year-in-Japan program at Nanzan, or an equivalent course at Sophia,
Kanazawa, Hakodate, or Middlebury. This course
takes students beyond the grammar-centered approach of textbooks to the study and discussion of
original materials produced in Japanese for everyday
Japanese consumption. Course materials include
excerpts from short stories, poetry, letters, social
criticism, academic writing, newspaper articles, and
video clips. Students may repeat the course more
than once, as the content of the course changes according to the needs and interests of the students
enrolled.
EALJ 40498. Special Studies
(V-V-V)
This course takes students beyond textbook Japanese
by introducing original materials created for Japanese audiences (literature, current events, and video
materials, etc.) Emphasis is on grammar and syntax,
vocabulary building, speaking, reading, and writing.
Courses in English
The courses listed below use materials in English
translation and require no prior background in Asian
studies.
LLEA 13186. Literature University Seminar in
English
(1-0-3)
An introduction to the study of East Asian literature.
The course will focus on either Chinese or Japanese
literature.
LLEA 20102. Culture, Media, and
Entertainment in China Today
(3-0-3) Noble
This course is designed to provide students with an
introduction to aspects of contemporary Chinese
culture, media, and entertainment. The class focuses
on the development of China’s media and entertainment industries, including the online industry, the
music industry, advertising, television, and the film
industry. Students will learn to critically analyze
authentic cultural products, study their cultural and
literary dimensions, and discuss how culture affects
the political and economic aspects of these industries. This class aims to be interdisciplinary and is designed to accommodate students from a large range
of academic interests, including business, marketing,
political science, economics, communication, media
studies, music, sociology, literature, film, cultural
studies, and Asian studies. No prior knowledge of
China or the Chinese language is required.
LLEA 20601. Societies and Cultures of South
Asia
(3-0-3)
This course provides a broad introduction to societies and cultures of South Asia (including India,
Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan,
and the Maldives). Emphasis will be on the Indian
subcontinent.
LLEA 20602. Japanese Society
(3-0-3)
This course presents a survey of the social structures
and forms of expression that make up the complex
society of contemporary Japan, using anthropological writings, history, reporting, film, and fiction.
LLEA 20603. Peoples of Southeast Asia
(3-0-3)
This course will introduce Southeast Asia through
close readings of important accounts of some of
its peoples, some of them long civilized and highly
cosmopolitan while others are apparently more
back-woodsy. It will examine the region’s history,
religions and social organizations tracing out themes
and variations that give this religion its unity and, for
all its diversity and its many waves of immigration,
make Southeast Asia a field of related cultures.
LLEA 20604. Societies and Cultures of South
Asia
(3-0-3)
This course provides a broad introduction to societies and cultures of South Asia (including India,
Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan,
and the Maldives). Emphasis will be on the Indian
subcontinent.
LLEA 20605. Islamic Societies of the Middle
East and North Africa: Religion, History, and
Culture
(3-0-3) Afsaruddin
This course is an introductory survey of the Islamic
societies of the Middle East and North Africa from
their origins to the present day. It will deal with the
history and expansion of Islam, both as a world religion and civilization, from its birth in the Arabian
Peninsula in the seventh century to its subsequent
spread to other parts of western Asia and North
Africa. Issues of religious and social ethics, political
governance, gender, social relations and cultural
practices will be explored in relation to a number
of Muslim societies in the region, such as in Egypt,
Morocco, and Iran. The course foregrounds the
diversity and complexities present in a critical area of
what we call the Islamic world today.
LLEA 23101. Chinese Literary Traditions
(3-0-3) Yang
A survey course introducing students to the major
themes and genres of Chinese literature through
selected readings of representative texts.
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LLEA 30101. Chinese Ways of Thought
(3-0-3)
This lecture and discussion course on the religion,
philosophy, and intellectual history of China that
introduces the student to the world view and life
experience of Chinese as they have been drawn from
local traditions, as well as worship and sacrifice to
heroes, and the cult of the dead. Through a close
reading of primary texts in translation, it also surveys
China’s grand philosophical legacy of Daoism, Buddhism, “Confucianism” and “Neo-Confucianism,”
and the later religious accommodation of Christianity and Islam.
LLEA 30102. Popular Religion and the
Practice of Philosophy in China
(3-0-3)
This lecture/discussion course will introduce the student to the plural religious traditions of the Chinese
as manifested in ancestor worship, sacrifice, exorcism, and spirit possession. From an understanding
of these practices, the course will offer insight into
the mantic foundations of Chinese philosophy, especially metaphysics, to reveal how these foundations
undergird the ordinary. Readings will consist of texts
in translations of the texts popular cults, including
Falun gong, as well as scholarly interpretations of
these phenomena. No prior knowledge of Chinese
history, language, or literature is required.
LLEA 30103. A Chinese Mosaic: Philosophy,
Politics, and Religion
(3-0-3)
A Chinese Mosaic is a special topics class that provides an introduction to the diverse life ways constituting the puzzle of the Chinese people. The course
will chart this terrain of current Chinese practice as
it has been shaped from the contending, and often
contentious, influences of religion, philosophy, and
politics, introducing students to the heralded works
of the Chinese intellectual tradition while requiring
critical engagement with the philosophic and religious traditions animating this culture today. Thus,
as they learn about China, students also will reflect
on how Chinese and Westerners have interpreted it.
LLEA 30602. Modern Japan
(3-0-3)
This introduction to modern Japanese history focuses on political, social, economic, and military affairs
in Japan from around 1600 to the early post-World
War II period. It considers such paradoxes as samurai
bureaucrats, entrepreneurial peasants, upper-class
revolutionaries, and Asian fascists. The course has
two purposes: (1) to provide a chronological and
structural framework for understanding the debates
over modern Japanese history, and (2) to develop
the skill of reading texts analytically to discover the
argument being made. The assumption operating
both in the selection of readings and in the lectures is
that Japanese history, as with all histories, is the site
of controversy. Our efforts at this introductory level
will be dedicated to understanding the contours of
some of the most important of these controversies
and judging, as far as possible, the evidence brought
to bear in them.
LLEA 30603. Comparative Business: Japan/
UK/US
(3-0-3)
This course will compare the historical development
of business in Great Britain, the United States, and
Japan from pre-industrial times to the present. It will
focus upon the evolution of the business firm and
its management; and in addition, will examine the
development of government-business relations and
the changing relations between business and society
in each nation. Our goal will be to critically evaluate
theories of convergence and divergence in business
systems around the world by examining business developments in terms of social, political, and cultural
contexts.
LLEA 30604. Chinese Society and Culture
(3-0-3) Blum
This course introduces students to the complexities
of contemporary Chinese society in the context of
the past. Topics covered include food, family and
gender, political activity, ethnicity and identity,
urban and rural life, work and unemployment,
economic complexity, multilingualism, arts, religion,
medicine and the body, and literature.
LLEA 30605. Cultures and Conflict in the
Pacific
(3-0-3) McDougall
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
In recent years, many Pacific societies has been
unsettled by conflict military coups, crises of law
and order, struggles for land rights, and battles over
nuclear testing. This course introduces students to
the diverse cultures of the Pacific by examining some
of these contemporary conflicts in historical perspective. Topics of particular interest are indigenous
rights, relations between indigenous people and
migrants, and the role of outside powers in Pacific Island states. In addition to examining the indigenous
cultures of the Pacific, we will compare and contrast
societies in which indigenous islanders are disenfranchised minorities (as in Hawaii, New Zealand, and
Australia) and those societies in which they are the
dominant majority (as they are in Fiji and Solomon
Islands).
LLEA 30606. Chinese Politics
(3-0-3) Moody
Study of the contemporary Chinese political system
and process in the light of Chinese history and
culture. Some of the topics treated include: the traditional political order; the revolutionary movements;
the rise of communism; Maoism and the rejection of
Maoism; the political structure; leadership, personalities, and power struggles; economic policy; social
policy and movements; problems of corruption and
instability; prospects for democratic development.
There will be some attention to Taiwan and to Hong
Kong as special Chin Vese societies.
LLEA 30607. Political Movements in Asia
(3-0-3)
This course analyzes a wide range of political movements including nationalist and revolutionary movements, guerrilla insurgencies, terrorist organizations,
democracy movements, and peace movements. The
Asian region encompasses China (including Taiwan,
Tibet, Xinjiang, Hong Kong), Mongolia, North
and South Koreas, Japan, the Philippines, Vietnam,
Thailand, Cambodia, Burma, Malaysia, Indonesia,
India, Pakistan, Nepal, Afghanistan, and so on. To
understand various movements, we will study global
trends, human rights values, cultural differences,
religious doctrines, historical legacies, state-society
relations, leadership skills, mobilization strategies,
and violent vs. nonviolent trajectories. In addition
to analytical readings, we will also watch a series of
documentaries and read a number of prominent
(auto-)biographies.
LLEA 31104. New Asian Cinema Lab
(3-0-0)
Corequisite(s): LLEA 33104
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
LLEA 33101. Heroism and Eroticism in
Chinese Fiction
(3-0-3)
In this course we will read works in Chinese fiction
from the late imperial periods. We will discuss the
aesthetic features of such works and their cultural
underpinnings, especially the infusion of Confucian,
Taoist, and Buddhist meanings. Particularly, we will
focus on heroism and eroticism as two major themes
in Chinese fiction and their specific expressions in
each work. We will consider the transition from
heroism to eroticism as a shift of narrative paradigm,
which coincided with a general trend of “domestication” in traditional Chinese fiction. Through the
readings and discussions, the students are expected
to become familiar with pre-modern Chinese narrative tradition and acquainted with some aspects
of Chinese culture. All the readings are in English
translation, and no prior knowledge of China or the
Chinese language is required.
LLEA 33102. The Image of Woman in Chinese
Literature
(3-0-3)
This course explores changing images of woman in
Chinese literature, from her early appearance in folk
poetry to the dominant role she comes to play in the
vernacular novel and drama.
LLEA 33104. New Asian Cinema
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): LLEA 31104
This course will introduce students to contemporary
Asian cinema. We will examine how Asian filmmakers define themselves and their (inter)national
identity through their aesthetic choices. We will
also explore the impact of globalization on regional
cinema, and the effect international audiences and
international investment have on the films that
are made. The course will focus on internationally
acclaimed films representing countries including
China, Japan, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. It will also
place these Asian films in their political, cultural,
and social context. Weekly film screening required.
All films with English subtitles. Course taught in
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English. The course could fulfill the University fine
arts requirement, and satisfy the International area
requirement for Film/TV concentrators.
LLEA 33105. Chinese Pop Songs: Global/
Local
(3-0-3)
This course explores pop songs since the 1980s from
China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong to examine various ways Chinese construct images of the self. As a
means of analyzing the material and expressing his or
her own viewpoint, each student will build a series of
media-rich Web pages including clips from the pop
songs introduced. Students will become proficient
with Web authoring programs and streaming audio
applications such as SoundForge. No prior knowledge of the Chinese languages or China is required.
LLEA 33106. The City in Modern Chinese
Fiction
(3-0-3)
Examining portrayals of cities such as Beijing and
Shanghai in fictional works, this course explores
the image of the city as the big, the bad, and the irresistible site of desire for modernity in 20th-century
China.
LLEA 33107. City in Chinese Film/Fiction
(3-0-3)
Since the first decade of the 20th-century, China has
undergone tremendous changes, which are most evident in the life of city dwellers. In this class, we will
read short stories and analyze films about urbanites
and their desires, anguish, and aspirations. We will
examine, for instance, why Shanghai was portrayed
as the nadir of vice in the 1930s. Or how the underprivileged youths struggle in present-day Beijing.
We will read about how the men and women of
Taipei and Hong Kong grapple with their changing
social, political, economic, and spiritual realities. To
complete our understanding of the city in the mind
of the Chinese, we will also explore writings by overseas Chinese on foreign cities such as New York and
Paris. We will try to answer questions such as how
different cities are portrayed and what these diverse
perceptions represent. How have these perceptions
changed over time? Is the city always exciting, threatening, or benign, and how do people in these various
places cope with modern life in the city? Is there no
more distinction among cities, now that we are all
living in a global village?
LLEA 33108. Anti-Social Behavior in Modern
Chinese Fiction
(3-0-3)
Chinese society is often characterized as highly conformative and lacking in individuality. Is this true?
What kind of behaviors then would be considered
antisocial, and what are their moral, social, and
political consequences? In this course, we will read
fictional works depicting behaviors and attitudes
that are considered by society in general as antisocial,
anticonventional, and sometimes anti-Party. We
will investigate the contexts of these behaviors and
their political implications. For instance, are these
behaviors justified? Are different standards applied
to women? What are the temporal and spatial factors in people’s conception of an antisocial behavior? To what extent are these behaviors culturally
determined? No prior knowledge of the Chinese
languages or China is required.
LLEA 33109. Cultural Performance in
Contemporary China
(3-0-3)
This course asks students to engage and analyze
different types of “cultural performances” in China
from the 1980s to the present day. How do we
interpret the diversity and complexity of cultures in
contemporary China? How is this diversity represented (or “performed”) within and between different types of mediums, disciplines, and socio-cultural
activities? After establishing an understanding of the
historical context for the period under discussion,
the course will examine different types of “cultural
performances” within a broad range of areas, including film, television, theater, advertising, the Internet,
and popular music, dance and leisure activities.
Particular issues to be examined in conjunction with
the “cultural performances” include commercialism
and consumerism, the role of the government, the
state, and nationalism, tradition and modernity, globalism and translationalism, the urban/rural divide,
class, and gender. The course will also provide a basic
introduction to theories of performance and performativity. Students will view, analyze, and discuss an
array of “cultural performances” through different
media and utilize the Internet as an interface for
collecting viewpoints from China and across the
Chinese diaspora to be applied to their own research
projects. In addition to providing a current overview
of the diversity of cultures in China and the contemporary issues embedded within, this course is ideal
for students seeking to explore the role of culture
across disciplines, including arts and literatures, history, anthropology, sociology, political science, media
studies, and business. No prior knowledge of Chinese language, culture, or history is required.
LLEA 33110. China’s Underground Cinema
(3-0-3)
This class explores “underground” films produced in
Mainland China since the 1980s. Many films that
were produced illegally or banned in China have
garnered awards in prestigious international film
festivals—Cannes, Berlin, Venice, Toronto, Tribeca
(and the list runs on). How and in what ways were
the films subversive? What is the role of China as a
nation and state in the production of film today and
in the past? How do these films play to the international film festival circuit and international market?
Is commercialization bringing about less government
control of film and other media in China? The class
will view both feature films and documentaries,
including those unavailable in the US (but all with
English subtitles). No prior knowledge of Chinese
language, culture, or history is required.
LLEA 33111. Collaborative Playwriting: Gender
Issues in Asian Theatre
(3-0-3) Juan
The course introduces the student to the process of
devising a dramatic text leading to a performance
of the text through collaborative methods. The class
discourse will evolve from gender issues articulated
by Asian theatre, traditional as well as contemporary.
Through this method, the students contribute,
evaluate, and try out their ideas toward the writing
and production of a theatre creation, which will be
performed at the end of the semester. Approach is
interdisciplinary.
LLEA 33301. Love, Death, and Revenge in
Traditional Japanese Drama
(3-0-3)
Love, death, and revenge were major themes in
Noh, Kabuki, and Bunraku, the three main forms of
traditional Japanese drama. During the first weeks of
this course, we will read plays from the Noh theatre,
which evolved out of a variety of performing arts
and reached maturity in the 15th century under the
patronage of the samurai aristocracy. In an effort
to create an atmosphere of mystery and beauty, the
plays transformed episodes from folk tales, courtly
romances, and military epics into highly stylized
dance-dramas imbued with the austere aesthetic of
Zen Buddhism. In the play Atsumori, for example,
we witness a confrontation between the ghost of
Taira Atsumori, a young warrior, and Kumagai no
Jiro Naozane, the man who killed him in battle. In
another play, Dojoji, a young woman turns into a
giant serpent to kill the man who deceived her. For
the remainder of the course, we will study Kabuki (a
theater of live actors) and Bunraku (puppet theater).
These two rival forms of popular entertainment developed in the early modern period (17th and 18th
centuries) as part of a new and lively urban culture.
This was the “floating world” (ukiyo) of teahouses,
brothels, and theaters, where townsmen mingled
with samurai in the pursuit of pleasure and spectacle,
and where Kabuki actors became the first “superstar”
celebrities. We will focus on plays by Chikamatsu
Monzaemon (1653–1725), the “Japanese Shakespeare”, who wrote for both Kabuki and Bunraku.
Plays such as The Love Suicides at Sonezaki, Gonza
the Lancer, and The Woman-Killer and the Hell of
Oil, bring to life tragic tales of star-crossed lovers,
unfaithful wives, and murdering ne’er-do-wells. In
the last weeks of the course, we will read Chushingura, the revenge of the 47 samurai, based on a
true event that occurred in 1703 when the former
retainers of Lord Asano burst into the mansion of a
high-ranking but corrupt government official and
killed him to avenge the death of their master almost
two years earlier.
LLEA 33302. Human Rights Environment and
Development: In South Asia
(3-0-3)
The Course with the help of real world cases will
identify that the issues of development, human
rights, and the protection of the environment are
of great importance to all of human society. They
assume critical importance in South Asian countries
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where the issues are intricately linked to complex
socio-political and economic factors. At first glance,
development would appear to be instrumental, the
prime vehicle for promoting the realization of human rights, in particular economic rights such as
the right to an adequate standard of living, the right
to work, the right to social security, right to education, the right to food and to the right to housing.
Environmental preservation and rehabilitation also
should be achieved through development. It is a sad
fact however, that the development projects in the
South Asian countries have overtaken poverty as
the single largest cause of human rights violations
and environmental degradation. Many development
projects that should have brought well-being to local
populations have in fact brought violations of human rights and environmental degradation.
LLEA 33303. Scandal and Intrigue in
Traditional Japanese Literature
(3-0-3)
This seminar explores the aesthetics and politics of
courtship and marriage among the aristocracy of
Japan. Readings include 10th- and 11th-century
classics such as The Pillow Book, The Tale of Genji,
and The Gossamer Years.
LLEA 33304. Self/Other in Modern Japanese
Fiction
(3-0-3)
1868, after some two-and-a-half centuries of feudal
isolation, the Japanese embarked on a vigorous program to “modernize” all aspects of their society along
Western lines. Japan emerged as a major military
power by the end of World War I, and 30 years later
emerged from the radioactive ashes of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki to become a major economic power.
How did history affect the way people thought of
themselves and their relationships to others, whether
family members, lovers and friends, or society as a
whole? In this class, through close readings of five
novels, we will examine how modern Japanese writers have dealt with issues of gender identity, past vs.
present, East vs. West, and the role of the individual
in society. At the same time, we will explore issues
related to identifying the themes, motifs, and structures of fictional narratives and how we interpret
them. This is a writing-intensive course in which
students will submit two drafts each for the four
papers required and have individual consultations
with the instructor to improve their analytic and
writing skills.
LLEA 33305. Topics in Modern Japanese
Fiction
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on a particular topic or theme
in modern Japanese fiction, such as gender, politics,
the city, war, etc., as found in works of fiction (in
English translation) by major 20th-century Japanese
writers. This course has no prerequisites and will satisfy the University or College literature requirement,
or the literature requirement for Japanese majors,
supplementary majors, and minors.
LLEA 33306. Japanese Film and Fiction
(3-0-3)
For Japan, an island nation whose feudal state
followed a policy of isolation for over 150 years
(1600–1868), the transition to modernity has been
an abrupt and complicated process. Modernization
has involved a transformation at every level of Japanese society, ranging from the political and economic
realms, to the scientific, cultural, and educational.
This course focuses on how some of Japan’s most
creative authors and film directors have responded
to debates relating to the strategies and sacrifices
involved in enacting sweeping social changes, and to
developing a modern, educated citizenry that would
include not only elite males, but women, the poor,
and ethnic or other minorities. Students will be
introduced to the concepts of authorial empathy and
tension between realism and fabrication in fiction
writing and filmic expressions; and to ways in which
gender, nationality, and other affiliations have been
constructed in the Japanese cultural imagery.
LLEA 33307. Film Fiction Japan
(3-0-3)
For Japan, an island nation whose feudal state
followed a policy of isolation for over 150 years
(1600–1868), the transition to modernity has been
an abrupt and complicated process. Modernization
has involved a transformation at every level of Japanese society, ranging from the political and economic
realms, to the scientific, cultural, and educational.
This course focuses on how some of Japan’s most
creative authors and film directors have responded
to debates relating to the strategies and sacrifices
involved in enacting sweeping social changes, and to
developing a modern, educated citizenry that would
include not only elite males, but women, the poor,
and ethnic or other minorities. Students will be
introduced to the concepts of authorial empathy and
tension between realism and fabrication in fiction
writing and filmic expressions; and to ways in which
gender, nationality, and other affiliations have been
constructed in the Japanese cultural imagery.
LLEA 33308. Japanese Film (Life, Death, and
Art in Japanese Film)
(6-0-3) Selden
This course introduces films by some of Japan’s most
prominent film directors. We will focus on how each
of these films articulates the relationship between
life, death, and art. In the process of analyzing the
films, we will explore such questions as, how does
the director portray life—as profound or absurd,
inspiring or oppressive? To what extent are Shinto,
Buddhist, and Christian attitudes about life and
death incorporated into the film? Does the director
advocate any particular philosophy about the social
and political roles of art? What are the cinematic and
narrative techniques he uses to convey his message,
and how effectively has he employed them? Films to
be analyzed include Double Suicide (Shinoda, 1969),
Hanabi (Kitano, 1997), Rikyu (Teshigahara, 1990),
and Tampopo (Itami, 1987).
LLEA 33309. Japanese Literature in the ’90s
(3-0-3) Bowen-Stryuk
Japanese Literature in the 1990s looks at the Japanese literary boom of the 90s as a literary project of
re-remembering the past and intervening in the present. In the last decade and a half, Japan has undergone a transformation from the economic miracle of
the 60s and 70s to economic recession, and with the
recession, many of the values that helped to sustain
high economic growth have come to be questioned:
strict gender differentiation, dedication to the company for men and to the home for women, frugality,
sacrifice of the personal for the social, emphasis on
high growth policies at the risk of the environment,
a resurgence in narratives of national homogeneity,
etc. In this course, we will look at work by Japanese
writers from the beginning of the recession until
today, thinking about the way that writers are problematizing previous homogenous notions of gender,
ethnicity and race; raising questions about the costs
of high economic growth on society’s subalterns; rethinking the emblem of that growth, the salary man,
who has lately become a favorite butt of dissatisfaction; rethinking the as-of-yet unresolved significance
of an ambitious and often cruel imperialist war on
the Asian mainland; and finally, we will think about
the significance of globalization and nationalism in
Japanese literature.
LLEA 33310. The Japanese Empire and
Literature
(3-0-3) Bowen-Stryuk
Japan emerged on the global stage as an imperialist
power with the defeat of China in 1895 (over Korea)
and the defeat of Russia in 1905 (again, over Korea).
By the end of the First World War, the “Japanese
Empire” included Taiwan, Korea, the south Pacific
islands called Nan-yang, and the southern half of
Sakhalin, not to mention the late 19th-century
acquisitions Okinawa and Hokkaido. Hardly a static
referent from 1895 until its dismantling upon defeat
in 1945, the “Japanese Empire” must have meant
something terribly different, depending on whether
you were a Japanese national or colonial subject; a
man or a woman; in the military or a man of letters;
a domestic worker or colonial settler; businessman
or maid. Even within the Japanese archipelago—indeed, even at the height of government censorship
on cultural production in the early to mid 40s—the
meaning of the “Japanese Empire” was a site of cultural contestation.
This class looks at the literary and artistic production—fiction, memoirs, poetry, film, visual arts, and
drama of the 50 year rise and fall of the Japanese
Empire. A current of this class deals with the interAsian, Bolshevik-inspired organizations that looked
to Japanese radicals, with no little irony, for solidarity in the fight against Japanese imperialism.
LLEA 33501. The Short Story In East Asia and
the Asian Diasporas
(3-0-3)
This course introduces students to short stories by
20th-century writers in China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan,
and the East Asian diasporas. The goals of the course
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east asian languages and literatures
are to examine the intertwined modern histories of
East Asian nation-states, investigate the short story
as a literary genre, and explore critical concepts of
literary and cultural identity studies. The stories will
be read in conjunction with critical essays on nation,
gender, and the short story with particular attention
to the narrative strategies of the authors. Reading the
stories both in terms of the cultural and ideological
contexts in which they were written and as material
artifacts available to us in English today helps to
problematize the meanings of “Chinese,” “Japanese,”
or “Korean” in East Asia and beyond. Ultimately,
this course will provide students with the conceptual
framework and vocabulary to interrogate gender,
race, and nationality as socially constructed categories. All readings are in English; no prior knowledge
of Asia is presumed.
LLEA 40601. Topics in Asian Anthropology
(3-0-3)
This course explores the latest developments in the
anthropology of Asian societies and cultures.
The course may include the study of nationalism and
transnationalism; colonialism and postcolonialism; political-economy; gender; religion;
ethnicity; language; and medicine and the body. Emphasis will be on social and cultural transformations
of Asian societies in specific historical contexts.
LLEA 40602. Religious Life in Asian Culture
(3-0-3)
This course examines diverse religious expressions
and lives of contemporary Asian peoples from an
anthropological perspective. This course explores
topics such as ritual, ancestor worship, shamanism,
spirit possession, divination, and festivals in changing Asian societies, including Japan, Korea, China,
Malaysia, and India.
LLEA 40603. Asia: Culture, Health, and Aging
(3-0-3)
With a focus on Asian case studies (Japan, Korea,
China, Taiwan, and India), this seminar provides an
introduction to both cultural gerontology and critical medical anthropology.
LLEA 40604. Gender and Power in Asian
Cultures
(3-0-3)
The class studies the representations of women and
men in different Asian societies and in different
political, social, and economic contexts, and their
affect on kinship, family, work, religion, and the
state. Ethnographic studies will cover Japan, Korea,
China, Malaysia, Indonesia, and India, with a special
emphasis on contemporary Japan.
LLEA 40605. Nation and Culture in Modern
Japan
(3-0-3)
From Gilbert and Sullivan’s operetta, The Mikado, to
the cherry blossom poems of kamikaze suicide pilots
in World War II, the nation of Japan has been presented as obsessed with the arts. But is this aesthetic
image simply ornamental? What are the political
ramifications of a national identity intimately inter-
twined with ideas of traditional high culture? When
was this association between nation and art made
and why? This course traces the intersection between
high art and national identity in Japan from the
mid-19th century to the mid-20th century (with a
brief post-war postscript.) During this century, Japanese government officials and intellectuals carefully
crafted a national image that went through at least
three stages in relation to high culture. In the early
Meiji period (1868–90), the Japanese leadership had
little use for Japan’s traditional arts and fervently
pursued a policy of Westernization in culture as well
as politics and economics. After 1890, Japanese arts
were revived as a basis for Japanese nationalism, partly because of interest from Europeans and Americans
who were intrigued by Japanese handicrafts, painting, sculpture, and ceremonies. During the Taisho
(1912–26) and early Showa (1926–60) eras, culture
was developed as a bulwark of ultranationalism.
The main focus of this course will be the ideological
and political uses of high culture. Readings for this
course will include primary documents (in translation) as well as secondary works. No background
knowledge of Japanese history is required.
Japan and Europe. We discuss the relationship
among nature, divinity, and human beings in the
Bible and Shinto and Confucian texts. We read radical agrarianist Ando Shoeki and see how his vision
of the natural state compares with that of his French
counterpart, Rousseau. We consider how nature
shapes political history in Hegel and Maruyama.
Finally, we try to figure out what the claim that the
Japanese love nature means both in terms of aesthetics and nationalism and in terms of environmental
protection.
LLEA 40606. Modern China
LLEA 40610. History of Chinese Medicine
(3-0-3)
The course will provide a general survey of Chinese
history from 1644 (the establishment of the Qing
dynasty) to the present. It will highlight China’s
evolution from a period of strength and unity during
the last dynasty to a period of disunity and weakness
during the revolutionary period 1911–49, back to
a period of strength under the Communist government from 1949 to the present. Special attention
will be given to the problems of economic modernization, the role that foreigners have played in
this process, and the relationship of both to cultural
development.
LLEA 40607. Premodern Japan
(3-0-3)
This course examines the development of Japanese
culture from earliest times to the early 19th century
in the context of the major political and social forces
that molded the country’s history. Major periods and
cultural epochs to be examined include a courtier
culture during the Heian period (794–1185), a
samurai culture developing in the 12th century on,
a Zen culture during a medieval age, the Christian
century, a bourgeois culture and an urban popular
culture during the Tokugawa period (1603–1868).
Japan’s relations with other Asian and European nations is also examined to understand Japan’s receptivity to cultural influences from abroad and its effort
to synthesize them with native taste.
LLEA 40608. Nature/Environment: Japan/
Europe
(3-0-3)
The purpose of this course is to explore Japanese
concepts of nature in comparison with those of
the West and then to ask how these concepts effect
modern Japan’s understanding of environmental protection. In other words, this course combines intellectual history and environmental history in
LLEA 40609. Premodern China
(3-0-3)
The course will provide a general survey of Chinese
history from the Shang Dynasty (1550–1045 BCE)
to 1600 CE. Besides highlighting the major developments of each dynasty, the course will devote special
attention to the Confucian and Legalist underpinnings of the Chinese empire, the influence of Buddhism on Chinese society, the emergence of gentry
culture and the civil service examination system,
and the phenomenon of “barbarian” conquest and
cultural interaction.
(3-0-3) Murray
In light of the contemporary currency of certain
Chinese practices in the field of alternative medicine,
this course will explore the phenomenon of Chinese traditional medicine in both its historical and
contemporary settings. The first unit, Medicine in
Ancient China, will explore the earliest medical ideas
of the Chinese and will demonstrate how the state’s
political unification gave rise to a correlative cosmology that not only included Heaven and Earth, but
also human beings as integral elements of an organic
cosmos. The second unit will explore the influences
and contributions of Taoism (Daoism) and Buddhism to Chinese medicine and will explore what
it meant to be both physicians and patients in late
imperial China. The third unit will focus on medicine in contemporary China and will feature the
experiences of Elisabeth Hsu, a student of Chinese
medical anthropology who as a part of her doctoral
research enrolled as a student in Yunnan Traditional
Chinese Medical College between September 1988
and December 1989. We will conclude the course
with a brief examination of the influence of Chinese
medicine on the contemporary world.
LLEA 40611. Global Development in Historical
Perspective
(3-0-3)
The difference between rich and poor nations is not,
as Ernest Hemingway once said, that the rich have
more money than the poor, but is in part because the
rich produce more goods and services. Industrialization, in other words, has often brought wealth (as
well as social dislocation and protest) to those who
have succeeded. This course examines the process
of industrialization from a comparative perspective
and integrates the history of industrialization and its
social consequences for Western Europe (Britain and
Germany), the United States, Latin America (Mexico), and East Asia (Japan and South Korea). We will
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economics
concentrate on the transition of these countries from
agriculturally-based societies to industrial societies.
We will analyze the process of industrialization on
two levels from above the role of political authority
and from below a view of factory life, industrial relations, and protest from the perspective of workers
and the working classes. No specific prerequisites in
history or economics are necessary.
Economics
LLEA 40612. Contemporary Asian/US Politics
Department of Economics and
Econometrics
(3-0-3)
Writing seminars are devoted to a specialized topic.
These seminars give students a chance to take an advanced course in a seminar setting, with an emphasis
on research skills and discussion. Juniors are encouraged to take writing seminars if space is available,
with permission from an advisor.
Director of Undergraduate Studies
Frank J. Bonello
Director of Undergraduate Advising
William H. Leahy
The major requires a preparation of ECON 10010/
20010 and 10020/20020 and eight junior- and
senior-level courses in economics. In completing the
junior- and senior-level courses, the student must
take: 30010. Intermediate Econoic Theory—Micro
30020. Intermediate Economic Theory—
Macro
30330. Statistics for Economics
Chair:
Richard A. Jensen
DeCrane Professor of International Economics:
Nelson C. Mark
Gilbert F. Schaffer Professor of Economics:
Christopher J. Waller
Professors:
Thomas Gresik; Richard A. Jensen; Nelson C.
Mark; Christopher J. Waller
Associate Professors:
Byung-Joo Lee; Lawrence C. Marsh; Kali P.
Rath;
Assistant Professor:
James X. Sullivan
In addition, students must satisfy a distribution
requirement by taking one course in at least three of
the following 10 areas.
Department of Economics and
Policy Studies
Quantitative Methods
Chair:
Jennifer L. Warlick
Carl E. Koch Professor of Economics
Philip Mirowski
Professors:
Rev. Ernest J. Bartell, CSC (emeritus); Charles
Craypo (emeritus); John T. Croteau (emeritus); Amitava K. Dutt; Teresa Ghilarducci; Denis Goulet (emeritus); Kwan S. Kim; William
H. Leahy; Jaime Ros; David F. Ruccio; Roger
S. Skurski (emeritus); Thomas R. Swartz;
Charles K. Wilber (emeritus)
Associate Professors:
David M. Betson; Frank J. Bonello; Gregory
Curme (emeritus); James J. Rakowski; David
F. Ruccio; Jennifer L. Warlick; Martin H.
Wolfson
Concurrent Associate Professor:
Mary Beckman
Concurrent Assistant Professor:
Kajal Mukhopadhyay
Program of Studies. The undergraduate major in
economics within the College of Arts and Letters
is designed to make a unique contribution to the
student’s liberal education. The program provides
students with the insights of scientific analysis and
social perspective to deepen their understanding of
the complex economic forces at work in society. Such
an understanding is an essential ingredient in the
intellectual development of an educated person. The
program is also designed to prepare the student for a
variety of professional objectives, including careers in
public service and law as well as managerial positions
in business and industry.
Policy
30500. Economics of Poverty
30510. Addressing US Poverty at the Local
Level
30520. Economics of Education
30530. Environmental Economics
40040. Topics in Applied Microeconomics
40550. Public Budget Expenditure Policy
40560. Tax Policy
40570. Law and Economics
40590. Stabilization Policy
43600. Seminar in Current Economic Policy
40050. Game Theory and Strategic Analysis
40300. Mathematics for Economists
40310. Econometrics
40320. Applied Econometrics
History and Philosophy of Economics
30100. Philosophy of Economics
30110. History of Economic Thought
33120. Seminar in History and Philosophy of
Economic Thought
33270. Economics of Science
40280. Consumption and Happiness
Monetary and Financial Economics
40360. Money, Credit, and Banking
Labor Economics
30400. Labor Economics
30410. Labor Relations Law
30420. Employment Relations Law and
Human Resources Practices
30430. Collective Bargaining: the Private
Sector
30440. Collective Bargaining: the Public
Sector
30450. Topics in Labor
30460. Economics of Gender and Ethnic
Discrimination
30470. Labor Arbitration
30480. US Labor History
Development Economics
30800. Development Economics
30820. Economic Development of Latin
America
40830. Economics Growth
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economics
International Economics
30820. European Economic and Monetary
Union
40700. International Economics
40710. International Trade
40720. International Money
Industrial Organization
40580. The Economics of Industrial
Organization
Political Economy
30200. Introduction to Political Economy
30220. Marxian Economic Theory
30260. Political Economy of Development
40201. Topics in Political Economy
40202. Problems in Political Economy
Urban and Regional Economics
30240. Economics of War and Peace
30540. Restoring Economic Vitality to the
Inner City
30810. Regional Economic Development
The remaining two courses may be any other
junior- and senior-level eonomics courses, except
those specifically designated as not fulfilling major
requirements.
Almost all economic courses include disciplinespecific writing assignments. These assignments typically involve the integration of graphical, mathematical, and statistical elements into the exposition to
this end an economics major must fulfill an
intensive-writing requirement in one of the following ways: (i) by taking a junior- or senior-level course
specifically designated as an intensive writing course;
(ii) by taking a special studies course that involves
writing a term paper under the supervision of a faculty member; or (iii) writing a senior essay.
Departmental advisors will assist students in designing a program of study that meets their educational and career goals. Students are also encouraged
to pursue related courses in other departments of the
College of Arts and Letters, the Mendoza College
of Business, and the College of Science. Materials
relating to professional work in law, graduate study
in economics, business in public power, and foreign
service are available from the director of undergraduate studies.
Course Descriptions. The following course descriptions give the number and title of each course.
Lecture hours per week, laboratory, and/or tutorial
hours per week and credits each semester are in parentheses. The instructor’s name, as available, is also
included.
ECON 10010. Principles of Micro Economics
(3-0-3) Staff
An introduction to economics, with particular attention to the pricing mechanism, competitive and
monopolistic markets, government regulation of the
economy, labor-management relations and programs,
income determination and public policy, trade, and
the international economy.
ECON 10020. Principles of Macroeconomics
(3-0-3) Mark
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A continuation of introduction to economics with
emphasis on national income and its determinants,
fluctuations in national income, money and credit,
fiscal and monetary policies, economic growth.
ECON 12010. Principles of Micro Economics
Tutorial
(0-1-0) Staff
Corequisite(s): ECON 10010
Tutorial for ECON 10010.
ECON 12101. Principles of Micro Economics
(3-0-3)
An introduction to economics, with particular attention to the pricing mechanism, competitive and
monopolistic markets, government regulation of the
economy, labor-management relations and programs,
income determination and public policy, trade and
the international economy.
ECON 13181. Social Science University
Seminar
(3-0-3) Ghilarducci, Kim, Rakowski
Economics sections will deal with different aspects of
economic analysis and policy issues. The focus will
be on understanding how economists think about
theoretical issues and how they apply their analytical
tools to real-world economic problems and policies.
No background in economics is assumed. The seminars will satisfy the University and College of Arts
and Letters social science requirements in addition to
the University seminar requirement.
ECON 20010. Principles of Micro Economics
(3-0-3) Staff
An introduction to economics, with particular attention to the pricing mechanism, competitive and
monopolistic markets, government regulation of the
economy, labor-management relations and programs,
income determination and public policy, trade and
the international economy.
ECON 20020. Principles of Macroeconomics
(3-0-3) Mark
A continuation of introduction to economics with
emphasis on national income and its determinants,
fluctuations in national income, money and credit,
fiscal and monetary policies, economic growth.
ECON 20502. Poverty and the Bishop’s
Pastoral Letter
(1-0-1) Wilber
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This class is designed to rewrite the poverty section
of Chapter 3 in the Bishops’ 1986 letter, “Economic
Justice for All.” There will be hearings with groups of
economists, theologians, community activists, et al.
The idea is to simulate the process the bishops went
through in writing the original document and to update the material in light of changes in the economy
over the past 19 years. Each student will prepare a
paper (8–10 pp.) that rewrites the poverty section.
ECON 22010. Principles of Economics II:
Discussion
(0-1-0)
An introduction to economics, with particular attention to the pricing mechanism, competitive and
monopolistic markets, government regulation of the
economy, labor-management relations and programs,
income determination and public policy, trade and
the international economy.
ECON 22020. Principles of Macroeconomics:
Discussion
(0-1-0) Staff
Corequisite(s): ECON 20020
Discussion: An introduction to economics with
emphasis on the nature and method of economics,
national income and its determinants, fluctuations in
national income, money and credit, fiscal and monetary policies, economic growth.
ECON 30010. Intermediate Economic
Theory—Micro
(3-0-3) Staff
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An examination of the language and analytical tools
of microeconomics, emphasizing the functional relationship between the factor and product markets and
resource allocation.
ECON 30020. Intermediate Economic
Theory—Macro
(3-0-3) Staff
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An intensive examination of macroeconomics, with
particular reference to the determination of economic growth, national income, employment, and
the general price level.
ECON 30220. Marxian Economic Theory
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An introduction to Marxian economic analysis. Topics include the differences between mainstream and
Marxian economics, general philosophy and methodology, Marxian value theory, and critical appraisals
and current relevance of Marx’s “critique of political
economy.”
ECON 30240. Economics of War and Peace
(3-0-3) Dutt
This course examines the consequences of wars, including international wars, civil wars and terrorism.
It also examines approaches to peace building and
post-war resconstruction. While it focuses mainly on
economic factors at work and makes us use the tools
of economic analysis, it adopts a broader political
economy framework.
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economics
ECON 30260. Political Economy of
Development
(3-0-3) Kim
This course surveys broad-ranging developmental
problems in the Third World from a politicaleconomy perspective, focusing in particular on the
currently debated policy issues along with the basic
analytical frameworks useful for the understanding
of these issues. Although the subject matters largely
concern the economic aspects of development, the
approach taken for this course is interdisciplinary,
involving, inter alia, an ethical and normative dimension.
ECON 30330. Statistics for Economics
(3-0-3) Lee, Marsh
The course is devised to present statistics and statistical inference appropriately for economics students.
There are two goals for the course: first, to prepare
the student to read elementary quantitative analysis
studies; and second, to prepare the student to undertake elementary quantitative analyses.
ECON 30400. Labor Economics
(3-0-3) Ghilarducci, Sullivan
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A survey course covering the economics of employment and unemployment; wages and income
distribution; poverty, education and discrimination;
unions and labor and industrial relations systems;
and comparative labor systems.
ECON 30460. Economics of Gender and
Ethnic Discrimination
(3-0-3) Ghilarducci
Women and ethnic minorities have the lowest
incomes, worst jobs, and highest levels of unemployment and poverty in the United States today. This
course examines the role of racism and sexism in the
US economy.
ECON 30500. Economics of Poverty
(3-0-3) Warlick
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An examination of the extent and causes of poverty
in the United States. The current system of government programs to combat poverty is analyzed. Reforms of this system are also considered.
ECON 30520. Economics of Education
(3-0-3) Warlick
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course reviews economic literature addressing
current educational issues in America, including
the adequacy of our K–12 public school system, the
effectiveness of maker-based reforms (vouchers and
public schools) and administered forms of accountability (standardized testing). We also examine the
rate of return of additional years of education (how
much education should individuals undertake?), access to higher education, financial aid systems, and
option to offset the rising cost of higher education.
ECON 30530. Environmental Economics
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An analysis of the welfare economics of environmental problems, emphasizing market failures due to
negative environmental externalities. Air, water, and
land pollution are classic examples of these externalities, which occur when third parties bear costs resulting from the transactions of the two primary market
participants. The theory and practice of environmental policy to promote efficiency at the US local, state,
and federal levels and in other countries is explored.
International problems such as transboundary pollution and global warming are also studied.
ECON 30540. Restoring Economic Vitality/
Inner City
(3-0-3)
This community-based learning and research course
examines the political economy of US inner-city
revitalization, with South Bend as a case study. Community-Based Learning (CBL) requires that students
both learn and apply what they are learning within
a setting outside the classroom. In addition to inclass seminar sessions, CBL activities will include
meetings with local organizations that link public
agencies and private enterprise, visits to varied businesses in urban South Bend, and meetings with area
government representatives and relevant church and
neighborhood organizations. During the first third
of the semester, students will learn about the central
problems of the US city and their roots, viewing the
issues firsthand locally. In the second third, they will
study how inner-city problems are being addressed
in selected areas of the country as well as in South
Bend. The South Bend Heritage Foundation (SBHF)
will act as a client organization for this course by
posing research questions for students to investigate
during the last third of the semester. The SBHF is a
private, not-for-profit service and community development corporation dedicated to the stabilization,
enhancement, and empowerment of South Bend’s
inner-city neighborhoods.
ECON 30580. Industrial Organization
(3-0-3)
Introduces the student to economic thinking about
the role of industry organization in economic
performance. Traditional economic thinking that
oligopolistic industry structures lead to poor performance is contrasted to theories that suggest that such
organization may under some circumstances lead
to superior performance. The two perspectives are
used to evaluate the relative performance of US and
Japanese industries.
ECON 30700. International Economics
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A study of the general theory of international trade;
the pattern of trade, gains from trade, tariffs, trade
and special interest groups, trade and growth, foreign
exchange markets, balance-of-payment problems,
and plans for monetary reform.
ECON 30800. Development Economics
(3-0-3) Ros
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
The current problems of Third World countries are
analyzed in a historical context, with attention given
to competing theoretical explanations and policy
prescriptions. The course will combine the study
of the experiences of Latin American, African, and
Asian countries with the use of the analytical tools
of economics.
ECON 30810. Regional Economic
Development
(3-0-3) Leahy
The analysis of regional economic problems in the
United States and selected European countries with a
focus on regional theory, methods of regional analysis, and pertinent development programs
ECON 30811. Family Business
(1.5-0-1.5)
This course explores the issues surrounding family
entrepreneurial ventures. It concentrates on the exploration of family succession and generational issues
that are unique to businesses that are launched and
run by families.
ECON 30820. Economic Development of Latin
America
(3-0-3) Ros
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An examination of the roots of dependence in Latin
America. An analysis of the key problems of economic development and the policies prescribed for
their solution.
ECON 30822. Latino Economic Development
Research and Policies
(2-0-2)
This course examines the Latino experiences in the
United States and the underlying conditions of Latino workers, businesses, and communities. It begins
with a profile of Latino workers by age, gender, education, immigrant make-up, and occupation in the
labor market. Students will learn how to use federal
and state data to examine Latino workers, income,
and occupation status. Students will learn about the
industrial and occupational classification systems
used by the federal government to study workers
and working conditions. They will also study related
public policies of the federal government that govern
over the human rights, economic status, and economic well-being of all US workers.
ECON 32510. Addressing US Poverty at the
Local Level
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course focuses on four arenas where poverty
manifests itself: homelessness, education, healthcare,
and jobs. Writing-intensive.
ECON 33100. Philosophy of Economics
(3-0-3) Mirowski
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
What does it mean to do good work in economics? If
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you thought the answer to this question was straightforward, you will be in for a surprise! The intention
of the course is to problematize such notions as “prediction is the goal of economics” or “there is progress
in economics” or “assumptions in economics should
be (un)realistic.” To do this, we will explore literature
on philosophy of science, sociology of scientific
knowledge, and economic theory.
ECON 33430. Collective Bargaining: Private
ECON 33120. Seminar in the History of
Economic Thought
(3-0-3) Leahy
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Analysis of the practice and procedures of arbitration
in labor grievances with emphasis on rights and interest issues is both public and private sector employment. Course stresses an analysis of arbitral awards.
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course explores literature on philosophy of
economics, history of economic thought, and new
directions in economic methodology.
ECON 33200. Introduction to Political
Economics
(3-0-3) Wolfson
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An introduction to theoretical frameworks, economic policies, and social factors often downplayed
or ignored in mainstream economics. Topics include
alternative theories of political economy, the relationship between economics and politics, and the
analysis of institutions. Writing-intensive.
ECON 33240. Economics of War and Peace
(3-0-3) Dutt
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course examines the consequences of wars, including international wars, civil wars, and terrorism.
It also examines approaches to peace buidling and
post-war resconstruction. While it focuses mainly on
economic factors at work and makes us use the tools
fo economic analysis, it adopts a broader political
economy framework.
ECON 33250. Justice Seminar
(3-0-3) Roos
An examination of major theories of justice, both
ancient and modern. Readings include representatives of liberal theorists of right, such as John Rawls,
as well as perfectionist alternatives. The course also
serves as the core seminar for the philosophy, politics, and economics concentration.
ECON 33400. Labor Economics
(3-0-3)
A survey course covering the economics of employment and unemployment; wages and income
distribution; poverty, education and discrimination;
unions and labor and industrial relations systems;
and comparative labor systems.
ECON 33420. Employee Relations Law
(3-0-3) Leahy
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A study of the development of command statutory
law with reference to industrial relation in the United States, giving emphasis to the case method.
(3-0-3) Leahy
The analysis of the procedures and economic implications of collective bargaining as it now operates
in the United States. Emphasizes a game theory
approach resulting in the negotiation of a labor
contract.
ECON 33470. Labor Arbitration
ECON 33500. Economics of Poverty
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An examination of the extent and causes of poverty
in the United States. The current system of government programs to combat poverty is analyzed. Reforms of this system are also considered.
ECON 33520. Economics of Education
(3-0-3)
This course reviews economic literature addressing
current educational issues in America, including the
adequacy of our K-12 public school system, the effectiveness of market-based reforms (vouchers and
charter schools) and administered forms of accountability (standardized testing). We also examine the
rate of return to additional years of education (how
much education should individuals undertake?), access to higher education, financial aid systems, and
options to offset the rising cost of higher education.
ECON 33540. Restoring Economic Vitality to
the Inner City: What Works, What Doesn’t,
and Why
(3-0-3)
This community-based learning and research course
examines the political economy of US inner-city revitalization, with South Bend as a case study.
Community-Based Learning (CBL) requires that
students both learn and apply what they are learning
within a setting outside the classroom. In addition to
in-class seminar sessions, CBL activities will include
meetings with local organizations that link public
agencies and private enterprise, visits to varied businesses in urban South Bend, and meetings with area
government representatives and relevant church and
neighborhood organizations. During the first third
of the semester, students will learn about the central
problems of the US city and their roots, viewing the
issues firsthand locally. In the second third, they will
study how inner-city problems are being addressed
in selected areas of the country as well as in South
Bend. The South Bend Heritage Foundation (SBHF)
will act as a client organization for this course by
posing research questions for students to investigate
during the last third of the semester. The SBHF is a
private, not-for-profit service and community development corporation dedicated to the stabilization,
enhancement, and empowerment of South Bend’s
inner-city neighborhoods.
ECON 37950. Special Studies
(V-0-V) Staff
Independent study under the direction of a faculty
member. Course requirements may include substantial writing as determined by the director. The
director will disenroll a student early for failure to
meet course requirements. Students who have been
disenrolled or who have failed at the end of the first
semester are disqualified for Special Studies in the
following term.
ECON 40050. Game Theory and Strategic
Analysis
(3-0-3) Rath
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
The objective of this course is to help students develop a good understanding of the basic concepts in
game theory and learn how to employ these concepts
to better understand strategic interactions. Topics
covered will include normal form games, extensive
form games, pure and mixed strategies, Nash Equilibrium, subgame perfect equilibrium, repeated
games, and introduction to games of incomplete
information. Selected applications will include competition and collusion in oligopoly, entry deterrence,
political competition and rent seeking, social norms
and strategic interaction.
ECON 40280. Consumption and Happiness
(3-0-3) Dutt
We live in an age in which consumption in many
parts of the globe has increased to unprecedented
levels and continues to rise. Many people take it for
granted that this increase in consumption is a good
thing because it increases human happiness. But
others are more skeptical, arguing that increasing
consumption has adverse consequences on the poor,
the environment, and future growth; that it results
in moral deprivation; and that it does not even make
those who consume more any happier. This course
critically examines this debate, which relates to all
of us as consumers, using the tools of economic
analysis.
ECON 40300. Matrh for Economists
(3-0-3) Marsh
Exposition of mathematical methods used in
economic theory and analysis with application of
these methods to economic theory. Major methods
covered include differential and integral calculus and
matrix algebra. Recommended for students planning
to go to graduate school in economics.
ECON 40310. Econometrics
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): (ECON 30330 or ECON 303)
Provides students with an understanding of when
and how to use basic econometric methods in their
work as an economists, including the ability to recognize which econometric technique is appropriate
in a given situation as well as what explicit and implicit assumptions are being made using the method.
Topics covered include estimation and hypothesis
testing using basic regression analysis, problems with
basic regression analysis, alternative econometric
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methods, limited dependent variables, and simultaneous equation models.
ECON 40320. Applied Econometrics
(3-0-3) Lee
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course introduces the statistical and econometric methods using the least squares estimation method in empirical economic applications. It is oriented
toward the practical applications of economic theory
with econometric methods rather than the theoretical development of these subjects. Emphasis will be
placed on the analysis of economic problems such as
the capital asset pricing model, wage discrimination,
and the married women workforce participation
decision issues.
ECON 40360. Money, Credit, and Banking
(3-0-3) Bonello
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An examination of the money and credit-supply
processes and the role of money and credit in the
economy. Topics include financial intermediaries,
financial markets, the changing regulatory environment, monetary policy, and international monetary
arrangements.
ECON 40447. Seminar in Health Care Policy
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): (ECON 30010 or ECON 301)
The first segment of the course demonstrates how
economics can be applied to the analysis of the
health care sector. The second part focuses upon the
pending policy debate of how we as a society will
provide for the health care needs of the elderly.
ECON 40550. Public Budget Expenditure
Policy
(3-0-3) Betson
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course will introduce students to normative
and positive economic theories of the role of governmental agencies in the economy, privatization and
the role of nonprofits; discussion of what level of
government should undertake collective action (fiscal
federalism); examination of the level and composition of our federal and local governments’ budgets
as well as the current budgeting process; cost-benefit
analysis, theoretical and pragmatic practices; and the
impact of governmental rules and regulations on the
economy.
ECON 40560. Tax Policy
(3-0-3) Betson
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course will introduce students to the following
topics: description of alternative tax instruments; historical trends of tax policies of the federal and state
governments; discussion of what would be a “good”
tax and criteria for choosing among different taxes;
theoretical analysis of taxes on household and business decisions; empirical evidence of the distribution
and efficiency consequences of different taxes; debt
and deficits.
ECON 40580. The Economics of Industrial
Organization
(3-0-3) Warlick
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An investigation into the structure of American
industry and an analysis of the implications of corporate economic power for public welfare.
ECON 40700. International Economics
(3-0-3) Rakowski
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A study of the general theory of international trade;
the pattern of trade, gains from trade, tariffs, trade
and special interest groups, trade and growth, foreign
exchange markets, balance-of-payment problems,
and plans for monetary reform.
ECON 40710. International Trade
(3-0-3) Kim
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course examines major theoretical, empirical
and institutional issues in the study of international
trade and international factor movements. The topics covered include determinants of trade patterns,
trade and welfare, commercial policy, trade and
growth, customs unions, international capital and
labor movements, and trade and development.
ECON 40720. International Money
(3-0-3) Kim, Mark
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course examines major institutional changes in
the international financial system, theoretical developments in the field of international monetary economics, and policy issues in the contemporary global
financial market. Topics include balance-of-payments
accounts, exchange rate markets and systems, openeconomy macroeconomics, international debt, and
contemporary international monetary and financial
arrangements.
ECON 40830. Economic Growth
(3-0-3) Mark
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This is an advanced undergraduate course that covers
how economists have come to understand the longrun growth of economies. We will cover theory, evidence, and policy aspects of growth. We begin with
empirical evidence-how rich are the rich countries,
how poor are the poor, and how fast do the rich and
poor countries grow. Next, we cover major theories
of growth from the Solow model of the 1950s to the
new growth theory that has ignited the field in recent years. These growth theories emphasize the role
of saving, physical and human capital accumulation,
technological change, structural change, and income
distribution. On the policy side, we will critically
examine the motivation and the success of various
policies that have been implemented by international
agencies such as the World Bank to promote growthpolicies such as subsidized investment, education,
birth control, and debt forgiveness.
ECON 43130. History of Economic Thought in
the Context of Intellectual History
(3-0-3) Mirowski
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course intends to ask how it is that we have arrived at this curious configuration of doctrines now
called “economics”; and importantly, how differing
modes of historical discourse tend to ratify us in
our prejudices about our own possible involvement
in this project. The course will begin in the 18th
century with the rise of a self-conscious discipline,
and take us through the stabilization of the modern
orthodoxy in WWII. Effort will be made to discuss
the shifting relationship of economics to the other
sciences, natural and social. A basic knowledge of
economics (including introductory economics and
preferably intermediate economics) will be
presumed.
ECON 43202. Problems in Political Economy
(3-0-3)
A seminar course concerned with policy problems
such as poverty, unemployment, quality of worklife,
energy and the environment, corporate power, military power, and discrimination. Alternative policy
prescriptions and methods of analysis are discussed.
Orthodox, conservative, and liberal views are studied
and later compared with nontraditional approaches
to the analysis of American capitalism and its institutional modifications. Writing-intensive.
ECON 43280. Consumption and Happiness
(3-0-3) Dutt
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
We live in an age in which consumption in many
parts of the globe has increased to unprecedented
levels and continues to rise. Many people take it for
granted that this increase in consumption is a good
thing because it increases human happiness. But
others are more skeptical, arguing that increasing
consumption has adverse consequences on the poor,
the environment, and future growth; that it results
in moral deprivation; and that it does not even make
those who consume more any happier. This course
critically examines this debate, which relates to all of
us as consumers, using the tools of economic analysis. Writing intensive.
ECON 43600. Current Economic Policy
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
The purpose of this seminar is to discuss current economic policy issues. Students will be required to read
newspapers (Wall Street Journal, New York Times)
on a daily basis and be prepared to discuss the economics of what was in the newspapers. Periodically
throughout the semester, the students will writer
one-to two-page critiques of the coverage of an issue
they found in the newspaper and will write a major
paper on a current issue and make a presentation in
the seminar.
ECON 47495. Senior Honors Essay I and II
(3-0-3) Staff
A two-semester tutorial requiring a completed essay
on a selected topic in economics in depth. The John
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Harold Sheehan Prize Essay Award with inscribed
plaque is awarded by the Department of Economics
to the graduating senior who has written the best
senior honors essay.
ECON 47498. Special Studies: Readings and
Research
(V-0-V)
Prerequisite(s): Senior standing, dean’s list average,
and written consent of instructor.
ECON 47950. Special Studies: Readings and
Research
(V-0-V) Staff
Independent study under the direction of a faculty
member. Course requirements may include substantial writing as determined by the director. The
director will disenroll a student early for failure to
meet course requirements. Students who have been
disenrolled or who have failed at the end of the first
semester are disqualified for Special Studies in the
following term.
ECON 47960. Senior Honors Essay
(3-0-3)
A tutorial requiring a completed essay on a selected
topic in economics in depth. The faculty of economics awards the John Harold Sheehan Prize Essay
Award with inscribed plaque to the graduating senior
who has written the best senior honors essay. Senior
economics majors only.
English
Chair:
Stephen A. Fredman
Assistant to the Chair:
Matthew Benedict
Director of Undergraduate Studies:
Glenn Hendler
Director of Graduate Studies:
Sandra Gustafson
Director of Creative Writing:
William O'Rourke
William B. and Hazel White Professor of English:
Gerald L. Bruns
William R. Keenan Chair of English:
Joseph A. Buttigieg
Donald and Marilyn Keough Professor of Irish Studies:
Seamus Deane
John and Barbara Glynn Family Professor of Literature:
Margaret Anne Doody
Notre Dame Chair:
Regina Schwartz
Notre Dame Chair:
Luke Gibbons
Notre Dame Chair:
Kevin Hart
Notre Dame Chair:
Katherine Kerby-Fulton
Notre Dame Chair:
Katherine O'Brien O'Keeffe
Notre Dame Chair:
John Sitter
Professors:
Jacqueline Vaught Brogan; Donald P. Costello
(emeritus); James P. Dougherty (emeritus);
Christopher B. Fox; Stephen A. Fredman;
Dolores W. Frese; Sonia G. Gernes (emeritus);
Peter Holland (concurrent); Thomas J.
Jemielity (emeritus); Christopher Andrew
Jones; Greg P. Kucich; Michael Lapidge (emeritus); Jill Mann (emeritus); John E. Matthias
(emeritus); Lewis E. Nicholson (emeritus);
William O’Rourke; Valerie Sayers; Regina
Schwartz (visiting); Donald C. Sniegowski
(emeritus); Chris Vanden Bossche; James H.
Walton (emeritus); Barbara Walvoord (concurrent); Thomas Werge
Associate Professors:
Kate Baldwin; James M. Collins (concurrent);
Cornelius Eady; Stephen M. Fallon (concurrent); Barbara J. Green; Stuart Greene; Sandra
Gustafson; Graham Hammill; Susan Harris;
Glenn Hendler; Romana Huk; Cyraina
Johnson-Roullier; William J. Krier
Assistant Professors:
Francisco Aragon (adjunct); Mary Burgess
Smyth; Theresa Delgadillo (on leave 05–06
AY); John Duffy; Antonette Irving; Kelly
Kinney (concurrent); Jesse Lander; Holly
Martin (concurrent); Sara Maurer; Orlando
Menes; Javier Rodríguez; John Staud (concurrent); Stephen Tomasula; Ivy Wilson
Professional Specialists:
Matthew Benedict; J. Anne Montgomery;
Noreen Deane-Moran
Instructors:
Sarah Micklem; John Wilkinson (concurrent)
Teaching Scholars (Post-Doctoral Fellows):
Kristin Mahoney, Heidi Oberholtzer Lee
Program of Studies. The Department of English
offers its majors a variety of courses in language and
literature. The offerings include courses in the several
periods of British literature from medieval to modern
times, in American literature from colonial to modern times, in certain aspects of classical and
European literature, and in other literatures written in English; in the genres of literature, in major
authors, in linguistic and literary theory, and in
expository and creative writing. All courses taught in
the department, not just those designated as writing
courses, contain significant writing components. All
majors take both a methods course as an introduction to various modes of critical thinking and analysis, and a research seminar that emphasizes intensive
writing.
The English major at Notre Dame studies the
English language both as it has been used by skilled
artists and as it can be used by the student. Precisely
how the study proceeds is a matter of continuing
decision by the student major. A new honors track
within the major has recently been established for
highly achieving students.
The department, then, makes available a wide variety
of courses, encouraging each major to develop a
program of selections suitable to his or her desires
and needs; each major is assigned a faculty advisor to
assist in this planning. The English major is thus able
to select from a broad spectrum of possible combinations in designing a comprehensive education in the
humanities. Of course, each major will vary his or
her program to select courses appropriate to individual postcollege plans which might include careers
in, e.g., education, business, journalism, government
service or a graduate degree in business, law school,
medical or dental school, graduate study for an MA,
MFA, or PhD, or some less overtly vocational notion
or purpose.
The requirements for the English major include: a
minimum total of 10 courses (30 credit hours) in
addition to the courses required by the college (two
first-year courses and one literature course). The
total credit hours must include three courses (nine
credit hours) in British and American literary traditions and seven other courses (21 credit hours) at
the 40000- or 50000-level including a one-semester
course designated “Methods” early in the major and
a one-semester course designated “Seminar” to be
taken in the senior year.
Course Descriptions. The following course descriptions give the number and title of each course.
Lecture hours per week, laboratory, and/or tutorial
hours per week and credits each semester are in
parentheses. The instructor’s name is also included.
For fuller descriptions and recent additions to course
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offerings, consult the department course description
booklet for the current semester, or the department’s
website, www.nd.edu/~english.
ENGL 10100. Introduction to Creative Writing
(3-0-3) Bliss, Chien, Hoang
An introduction to writing fiction and poetry, with
outside readings and coverage of basic critical terms.
In-class discussion of student work.
ENGL 10101. Introduction to Fiction Writing
(3-0-3)
A workshop on the writing of fiction.
ENGL 10102. Introduction to Poetry Writing
(3-0-3)
A workshop on the writing of poetry.
ENGL 13186. Literature University Seminar
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the seminar method of instruction, emphasizing the analysis of literary texts.
ENGL 20011. Fiction Writing
(3-0-3) Tomasula
A course in writing the short story and related forms
of brief fiction.
ENGL 20012. Fiction Writing
ENGL 20018. Fiction Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A course in writing the short story and related forms
of brief fiction.
ENGL 20031. Poetry Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A workshop on writing poetry, from exercises on the
making of images to poetry as objective narrative,
subjective journal, monologue, and direct address.
ENGL 20032. Poetry Writing
ENGL 20101. Introduction to Greek Literature
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A workshop on writing poetry, from exercises on the
making of images to poetry as objective narrative,
subjective journal, monologue, and direct address.
ENGL 20034. Poetry Writing
ENGL 20035. Poetry Writing
ENGL 20015. Fiction Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A course in writing the short story and related forms
of brief fiction.
ENGL 20016. Fiction Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A course in writing the short story and related forms
of brief fiction.
ENGL 20017. Fiction Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A course in writing the short story and related forms
of brief fiction.
(3-0-3)
This course is devoted to the study and practice of
writing in public life, or writings about political,
environmental, and cultural issues.
ENGL 20033. Poetry Writing
ENGL 20013. Fiction Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A course in writing the short story and related forms
of brief fiction.
ENGL 20091. Writing, Rhetoric, and Public Life
ENGL 20100. Monsters in Literature
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A workshop on writing poetry, from exercises on the
making of images to poetry as objective narrative,
subjective journal, monologue, and direct address.
ENGL 20014. Fiction Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This is a course in “close writing” in a wide range of
dynamic and innovative genres of creative nonfiction, from the personal essay to meditations to literary journalism.
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A workshop on writing poetry, from exercises on the
making of images to poetry as objective narrative,
subjective journal, monologue, and direct address.
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A course in writing the short story and related forms
of brief fiction.
(3-0-3) Benedict
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A course in writing the short story and related forms
of brief fiction.
ENGL 20071. Creative Nonfiction
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A workshop on writing poetry, from exercises on the
making of images to poetry as objective narrative,
subjective journal, monologue, and direct address.
ENGL 20036. Poetry Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A workshop on writing poetry, from exercises on the
making of images to poetry as objective narrative,
subjective journal, monologue, and direct address.
ENGL 20037. Poetry Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A workshop on writing poetry, from exercises on the
making of images to poetry as objective narrative,
subjective journal, monologue, and direct address.
ENGL 20038. Poetry Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A workshop on writing poetry, from exercises on the
making of images to poetry as objective narrative,
subjective journal, monologue, and direct address.
ENGL 20039. Poetry Writing
(3-0-3)
A workshop on writing poetry, from exercises on the
making of images to poetry as objective narrative,
subjective journal, monologue, and direct address.
(3-0-3)
A survey of two thousand years of “monsters” in
literature, ranging from Metamorphoses by Ovid to
Frankenstein by Shelley to Grendel by Gardener.
(3-0-3)
Introduction to Greek Literature combines study of
the literary genres that have broadly influenced the
course of Western letters with representative works
chosen for their traditional interest and openness to
a variety of critical approaches. All Greek literature
begins with the epic Iliad, which may be taken as the
foundational text for the tragic view of life. This will
be followed by readings of choral and solo lyric poetry, and then by drama, both tragic and comic. Critical historiography was a notable Greek contribution
to the Western tradition, and it is represented by
Herodotus, Thucydides, and Polybius. Demosthenes’
courtroom attack on Neaira illustrates rhetoric and
reveals a great deal about gender and culture in the
4th century BCE. Plato’s social and moral criticisms
will be addressed in Gorgias or Symposium. Finally,
literature of the imperial period will be represented
by chosen Lives of Plutarch and satirical essays of
Lucian.
ENGL 20102. Scandal, Intrigue in Traditional
Japanese Literature
(3-0-3)
Explore the aesthetics and politics of courtship and
marriage among the aristocracy of Japan. Readings
include 10th- and 11th-century classics such as The
Pillow Book, The Tale of Genji, and The Gossamer
Years.
ENGL 20103. Love, Death, and Revenge in
Japanese Drama
(3-0-3)
An introduction to Japanese classical theater (Noh,
Kyogen, Bunraku, and Kabuki) through readings
and videotapes of selected plays.
ENGL 20104. Image of Women in Chinese
Literature
(3-0-3)
This course explores changing images of woman in
Chinese literature, from her early appearance in folk
poetry to the dominant role she comes to play in the
vernacular novel and drama.
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ENGL 20105. Border Crossings: Mexican and
Canadian Literature
(3-0-3)
Mexican and Canadian literature emphasizing cultural interaction between the USA and its southern
and northern neighbors.
ENGL 20106. Point-of-View of the Novel
(3-0-3) Deane-Moran
This course focuses on an introduction to the novel
as a form, as a means to view the world of the
author/artist and that of the reader.
ENGL 20107. Satire
(3-0-3)
An introduction to satire in Western literature.
ENGL 20108. Image and Text
(3-0-3) Montgomery
This course investigates the interaction between the
verbal language of poetry and prose on the page and
the visual images which are designed to accompany
them.
ENGL 20109. Self and Society in Modern
Japanese Fiction
(3-0-0)
An exploration, in English, of how native Japanese
fiction writers responded to the challenges of an
“imported” modernity after World War II, including
contemporary and post-modern Japanese fiction.
ENGL 20110. Late-Twentieth-Century
Canadian Literature
(3-0-3)
The course examines selected works by contemporary Canadian authors, including those from
Quebec.
ENGL 20111. Realism and the Supernatural
(3-0-3)
An attempt to develop a theory of the supernatural
and the uncanny in “realistic” fiction from Daniel
Defoe to Henry James.
ENGL 20112. Comedy
(3-0-3)
A multimedia examination of different and recurring
patterns, themes, characters, types, and problems in
comedy—in drama, opera, and operetta, film, fiction, and radio and TV—with particular focus on
the role and treatment of women.
ENGL 20113. Fictions of Insanity
(3-0-3)
An examination of the literary motif of insanity in
novels and short stories from the 19th and 20th
Centuries, tracing cultural fascinations with “abnormal,” “insane,” “mad,” “psychotic,” “crazy,” and
“irrational” minds.
ENGL 20114. From Beowulf to Monty Python
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the historical epoch known as
“The Middle Ages” through its own texts as well as
the modern texts that represent it.
ENGL 20115. City in Modern Chinese Fiction
(3-0-3)
Chinese society is often characterized as highly conformative and lacking in individuality. Is this true?
What kind of behaviors then would be considered
antisocial, and what are their moral, social, and
political consequences? In this course, we will read
fictional works depicting behaviors and attitudes
that are considered by society in general as antisocial,
anticonventional, and sometimes anti-Party. We
will investigate the contexts of these behaviors and
their political implications. For instance, are these
behaviors justified? Are different standards applied
to women? What are the temporal and spatial factors in people’s conception of an antisocial behavior? To what extent are these behaviors culturally
determined? No prior knowledge of the Chinese
languages or China is required.
ENGL 20117. Studies in Comedy
(3-0-3)
Various forms of comic literature through the ages.
ENGL 20118. Age of Augustus
(3-0-3)
The purpose of this course is to consider the historical events, cultural productions, social and political
issues, and legacy of the age of Augustus. Topics to
be considered will include the fall of the Republic,
the Augustan architectural and literary program,
artistic freedom under an autocracy, and the nature
of empire. Readings will be taken from Cicero,
Vergil, Livy, Horace, Ovid, Tibullus, Propertius, and
Suetonius.
ENGL 20119. Fairy and the Christian Myth
(3-0-3)
This course will explore the interface and conflict
between fairy and Christian in the medieval and
renaissance tradition by discussing the legend of the
holy grail and by reading Sir Gawain and the Green
Knight, Book 1 of Spenser’s Faerie Queene, Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream, Milton’s Comus,
and parts of Tennyson’s Idylls of the King. In the
second half of the course, we will turn to a modern
mythmaker by reading Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings.
ENGL 20120. The Short Story in East Asia and
the Asian Diasporas
(3-0-3)
This course introduces students to short stories by
20th-century writers in China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan,
and the East Asian diasporas. The goals of the course
are to examine the intertwined modern histories of
East Asian nation-states, investigate the short story
as a literary genre, and explore critical concepts of
literary and cultural identity studies. The stories will
be read in conjunction with critical essays on nation,
gender, and the short story with particular attention
to the narrative strategies of the authors. Reading the
stories both in terms of the cultural and ideological
contexts in which they were written and as material
artifacts available to us in English today helps to
problematize the meanings of “Chinese,” “Japanese,”
or “Korean” in East Asia and beyond. Ultimately,
this course will provide students with the conceptual
framework and vocabulary to interrogate gender,
race, and nationality as socially constructed categories. All readings are in English; no prior knowledge
of Asia is presumed.
ENGL 20121. Chinese Literary Traditions
(3-0-3) Yang
A survey course introducing students to the major
themes and genres of Chinese literature through
selected readings of representative texts.
ENGL 20122. Animal Antics of Britain
(3-0-3)
A close reading of some of the best animal stories
in British literature: from Chaucer, Shakespeare,
Spenser, Aesop’s Fables, and the story cycle of Reynard
the Fox, to the novellas of A.S. Byatt, the film Babe,
and the controversial art of Damien Hirst.
ENGL 20123. Food and Consumption in North
American Literature
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the literary world of eating, food,
and food culture through a long chronological span
of American and Mexican writing, over a wide range
of genres.
ENGL 20124. Japanese Film and Fiction
(3-0-3)
For Japan, an island nation whose feudal state
followed a policy of isolation for over 150 years
(1600–1868), the transition to modernity has been
an abrupt and complicated process. Modernization
has involved a transformation at every level of Japanese society, ranging from the political and economic
realms, to the scientific, cultural, and educational.
This course focuses on how some of Japan’s most
creative authors and film directors have responded
to debates relating to the strategies and sacrifices
involved in enacting sweeping social changes, and to
developing a modern, educated citizenry that would
include not only elite males, but women, the poor,
and ethnic or other minorities. Students will be
introduced to the concepts of authorial empathy and
tension between realism and fabrication in fiction
writing and filmic expressions; and to ways in which
gender, nationality, and other affiliations have been
constructed in the Japanese cultural imagery.
ENGL 20125. Literary Outsiders
(3-0-3)
A close study of the motif of the outsider, in his
or her various guises, primarily from literary but
also philosophical, sociological, and psychological
perspectives, with the goals of identifying what historical literary spaces outsiders inhabit and whether
these spaces are still available to literary expression in
the 21st century.
ENGL 20126. One Thousand Years of
Monsters
(3-0-3)
A survey of “monsters” in Western literature.
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ENGL 20139. English Catholic Literature, from
Thomas More to Graham Greene
ENGL 20211. Shakespeare’s Comedies
(3-0-3)
A survey of selected English Catholic novelists.
(3-0-3)
A survey of the comedic plays of William
Shakespeare.
ENGL 20200. Kingship in Renaissance
Literature
ENGL 20212. Love Poetry in the Renaissance
(3-0-3)
An examination of the mystique of kingship in the
English Renaissance.
(3-0-3)
Close readings of the Renaissance “love poetry,”
juxtaposed to several classic Hollywood romantic
comedies.
ENGL 20202. Love in the Middle Ages
ENGL 20215. Introduction to Shakespeare
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the complex, moving, and often
contradictory medieval literatures of love.
ENGL 20203. Shakespeare in Performance
(3-0-3)
A performance-oriented Shakespeare course based
on the rapprochement of theatrical and literary disciplines, techniques, and interpretations.
ENGL 20204. Shakespeare and Film
(3-0-3)
A survey of how Shakespeare uses sex and violence as
potential literary devices within his plays, and how
film adaptations of the plays help us understand the
effects of this sensationalism.
ENGL 20205. From Beowulf to Monty Python
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the historical epoch known as
“The Middle Ages” through its own texts as well as
the modern texts that represent it.
ENGL 20206. Dante: Divine Comedy
(3-0-3)
A study of The Divine Comedy, in translation with
facing Italian text, with special attention to the history of ideas, the nature of mimesis and allegory, and
Dante’s sacramental vision of life.
ENGL 20207. The Journey in Medieval
Literature
(3-0-3) Bays
Map’s The Quest of the Holy Grail; Dante’s Divine
Comedy; Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales; Cervantes’ Don
Quixote.
(3-0-3) Martin
An examination of selected plays of Shakespeare,
with an emphasis on Shakespeare’s development as a
dramatist and his techniques of character
development.
ENGL 20302. The Romantic Tradition
(3-0-3)
Between 1790 and 1830, the movement known as
Romanticism profoundly changed the artistic, musical, historical, religious, and political sensibilities on
the Continent and in Britain. Romanticism marked
a turn from the rational formalism of the Classical
period and reawakened an interest in myth, religious
faith, the imagination, and emotional experience.
In this course, we will focus principally on the German contribution to Romanticism and trace its
origins, development, and eventual decline in works
of literature, philosophy, theology, music, painting,
and architecture. Works to be studied will include
those by the writers Ludwig Tieck, Friedrich von
Hardenberg (Novalis), and Friedrich Schelgel; the
philosophers Fichte and Schelling; the theologian
Friedrich Schleiermacher; the painters Caspar David
Friedrich and some members of the Nazarene school;
the composers Franz Schubert, Felix Mendelssohn,
and Robert Schumann; and the architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel.
ENGL 20303. C.S. Lewis, Tolkien, and Inklings
(3-0-3)
“Otherworldly” fiction as well as the theological,
critical, and philosophical writings of C.S. Lewis,
J.R.R. Tolkien, and the Inklings.
ENGL 20304. Madness in Victorian Literature
ENGL 20209. Love’s Knowledge in the
Renaissance
(3-0-3)
A survey of Renaissance literature based on what
kind of knowledge these texts think love affords.
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the Victorian fascination with the
aberrant, the peculiar, and the fantastic alongside of
the Victorians’ notorious reputation for prudery and
repressiveness.
ENGL 20210. Religious Writings and Images
in Medieval England
ENGL 20305. Victorian Empire Writing
1868–1901
(3-0-3)
This course examines the visual and dramatic aspects
of literary religious writings. Texts include: The Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ (selections), The
Cloud of Unknowing (selections), Julian of Norwich’s
Showings, The Book of Margery Kempe, the York
Corpus Christi Plays, from the Creation to the Last
Judgment, and Chaucer’s Summoner’s Tale.
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the empire as theme in selected
Irish writers of the late 19th century.
ENGL 20306. Crime in Nineteenth-Century
Novels
(3-0-3)
Diverse perspectives on Irish and British history and
literature provide a frame for discussing violence and
social change, sexuality, economics, and politics in
novels written in Ireland and Britain during the last
half of the 19th century.
ENGL 20308. Love and Money in the
Nineteenth-Century British Novel
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on the ways in which the novel
both reflected and produced transformations in the
relationship between class, gender, and love in 19thcentury England.
ENGL 20309. British Novel: Economics,
Politics, Gender
(3-0-3)
Major British novels of the 18th, 19th, and 20th
centuries confront the political, economic, and gender issues of their times.
ENGL 20310. Nineteenth-Century British
Literature
(3-0-3)
A survey of major 19th-century British writers.
ENGL 20311. Evolving Science Fictions
(3-0-3)
A historical perspective on the development and
growth of British science fiction literature in the
19th century.
ENGL 20329. The Victorian City
(3-0-3) Mahoney
How notions of “the city” were depicted in 19thCentury British literature.
ENGL 20333. Religion and Ridicule in
Eighteenth-Century British Literature
(3-0-3) Traver
How the topics of religion and religious satire were
explored by 18th-century British writers.
ENGL 20400. World War I: Narratives of War
(3-0-3)
A study of how narratives concerning World War
I affected two connected discourses: feminism and
psychoanalysis, particularly in light of men’s and
women’s differing roles in the war through the work
(physical, emotional, and artistic) in which they were
engaged.
ENGL 20401. History and Twentieth-Century
Novels
(3-0-3)
An exploration of how history and memory are narrated and constructed in American and European
novels throughout the 20th century through answering such questions as: How is novel-writing different
than history-writing? How does the process of writing relate to the process of memory, particularly in
the case of a traumatic memory? What makes a novel
“literary” versus merely “popular”? And does the creation of a narrative, story, or history have value, even
if it leaves something, or someone, out of the story?
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ENGL 20402. Paranoia and Narrative in
Twentieth Century
(3-0-3)
An evaluation of the ways in which narrative is implicated in our need to find a comfortable pattern for
our lives, even if that pattern is self-destructive.
ENGL 20403. History and Twentieth-Century
Novels
(3-0-3)
An exploration of how history and memory are narrated and constructed in American and European
novels throughout the 20th century through answering such questions as: How is novel-writing different
than history-writing? How does the process of writing relate to the process of memory, particularly in
the case of a traumatic memory? What makes a novel
“literary” versus merely “popular”? And does the creation of a narrative, story, or history have value, even
if it leaves something, or someone, out of the story?
ENGL 20404. Postmodern British Macabre
cinemas. Often these productions are a dynamic mix
of Hollywood influences, assertive local cultures, and
government control. This course examines the films
of one or more countries to reveal their distinctive
styles, stories, and visual and narrative techniques.
(The nationality varies each year.) The idea of “nation” as a critical concept is also addressed. May be
repeated. Fulfills the University fine arts requirement
and the Film/TV international area requirement.
ENGL 20503. Northern Irish Writing and
Politics
(3-0-3)
A study of Irish writers in the North since the
Troubles began in the 1960s.
ENGL 20504. Writing in Northern Ireland
(3-0-3)
This course explores the politics of culture, and the
cultures of politics, in the North of Ireland during
the 20th century.
(3-0-3)
A survey of texts by late-20th-century British novelists and musicians who, through various aesthetic
strategies, attempted to reflect the chaos and insanity
that seemed to be enveloping Britain as it finally
imploded as an empire.
ENGL 20505. Imprisonment in Irish Literature
ENGL 20406. Mysticism in Modern Literature
(3-0-3)
Diverse perspectives on Irish and British history and
literature provide a frame for discussing violence and
social change, sexuality, economics, and politics in
novels written in Ireland and Britain during the last
half of the 19th century.
(3-0-3)
This course examines the persistence of mystical and
spiritual traditions in the literary texts of the early
20th century: Underhill, Hopkins, Yeats, Conrad,
Joyce, Owen, Eliot, Crane, Hesse, Forster, Mansfield,
Woolf, and Waugh.
ENGL 20407. Christianity and Modernism
(3-0-3)
The theme of imprisonment in 19th-century Irish
writing.
ENGL 20507. Crime and Progress in the
Nineteenth-Century British Novel
ENGL 20508. The Irish in Their Own Words
(3-0-3)
How British and American modernist writers responded to an upheaval of traditional religious belief
in the first half of the 20th century.
(3-0-3)
This course is designed as an introduction to the
literature of Medieval Ireland. Particular emphasis
will be placed on the prose saga texts like the Tain Bo
Cualnge or Cattle Raid of Cooley, which features the
legendary hero Cu Chulainn; also the various texts in
both prose and poetry of the Fenian cycle of Fionn
Mac Cumhaill (Finn McCool). The manner in
which such texts shed light on the nature of medieval
Irish society will be examined. There will be regular
reading and writing assignments, and students will
be expected to take part in class discussion.
ENGL 20432. Social Unrest and the British
Novel: 1730–1980
ENGL 20509. Twentieth-Century Irish
Literature
(3-0-3)
A study of Christian writers and how they struggle
with the literary and cultural movement labeled
“modernism.”
ENGL 20408. Faith and Fragmentation in
Modernity
(3-0-3)
How the novel chronicled the changes and social
upheaval in British society and culture over the 18th,
19th, and 20th centuries.
ENGL 20501. Irish Fiction, 1945–2000
(3-0-3)
A study of major Irish writers since World War II.
ENGL 20502. National Cinema: Irish Cinema/
Culture
(3-2-3)
Corequisite(s): ENGL 21001
Every industrialized country, and many non-industrialized ones, have developed distinctive national
(3-0-3)
The cultural and political factors that have shaped
Ireland’s extraordinary literary achievement, paying
particular attention to Irish Decolonization and
the Northern Troubles. Readings from Shaw, Yeats,
Joyce, Bowen, Friel, Heaney, and Deane.
ENGL 20510. The Hidden Ireland
(3-0-3)
Daniel Corkery’s study of the literature and society
of Irish-speaking Munster in the 18th century
(The Hidden Ireland, first published in 1924) is an
acknowledged classic of Irish literary history. This
course will examine aspects of the corpus of 18thcentury poetry in the Irish language in the light of
Corkery’s analysis and of subsequent reassessments
of that analysis (Louis Cullen and Breandan O
Buachalla, for example).
ENGL 20511. Modern Irish Drama
(3-0-3)
Dramatic representations of the Irish “character” and
the Irish nation from the end of the 19th century
through the 20th. Includes Yeats, Lady Gregory,
O’Casey, Shaw, and Synge.
ENGL 20512. Culture and Politics in Northern
Ireland
(3-0-3) Smyth
This course explores the politics of culture, and the
cultures of politics, in the North of Ireland during
the 20th century.
ENGL 20513. Introduction to Irish Writers
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): ENGL 22514
W.B. Yeats, Elizabeth Brown, Bram Stoker, J.M.
Synge, Seamus Heaney, Medbh McGuckian.
ENGL 20514. Introduction to Irish Writers
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): FYC 13100 or FYC 110
Corequisite(s): ENGL 22514
W.B. Yeats, Elizabeth Brown, Bram Stoker, J.M.
Synge, Seamus Heaney, Medbh McGuckian.
ENGL 20516. The Irish in Their Own Words
(3-0-3)
This course is designed as an introduction to the
literature of Medieval Ireland. Particular emphasis
will be placed on the prose saga texts like the Tain
bo Cualange or Cattle Raid of Cooley, which features
the legendary hero C/u Chulainn; also the various
texts in both prose and poetry of the Fenian cycle
of Fionn Mac Cumhaill (Finn McCool). The manner in which such texts shed light on the nature of
medieval Irish society will be examined. There will
be regular reading and writing assignments, and students will be expected to take part in class discussion.
ENGL 20517. Women in Irish Oral Tradition
(3-0-3)
A examination of women’s oral verbal art in Irish and
English through transcribed texts, sound recordings,
and film.
ENGL 20518. Anglo Irish Literature
(3-0-3) Witek
An examination of Irish Identity through an introduction to the literature, both historical and contemporary, of Anglo Ireland.
ENGL 20519. Irish Gothic/Union to Troubles
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the ways in which Irish literature,
both historical and contemporary, uses ghosts,
vampires, demons, and rebels to grapple with threats
facing Irish society.
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ENGL 20528. Folklore in Irish Literature
(3-0-3) Henigan
A close reading of traditional Irish myths, tales,
songs, customs, rituals, and beliefs.
ENGL 20530. Twentieth-Century Irish and
Native-American Literature: When We were
Noble Savages
(3-0-3) Dougherty-McMichael
From the outset of colonization in both Ireland and
North America literature was employed in similar
fashion to romanticize, demonize and, more often
than not, silence Irish and Native American cultures.
Today, with the surge in post-colonial literatures,
Irish and Native American literatures have found
new voices that look to the past in order to explore
the present. Instead of romanticizing cultural memories, these authors subvert and challenge heroic
representations while dispelling stereotypes. Together
these separate literary traditions intersect and diverge, challenging accepted perspectives of history
and culture while blending stories with oral tradition, popular history and pop culture.
With these intersections in mind, we will explore an
array of literature from both Irish and Native American traditions, from novels to poetry to film. We will
look at a variety of authors including Flann O’Brien,
Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill, Eilis Ni Dhuibhne, Leslie
Marmon Silko, Sherman Alexie, and Simon Ortiz.
Requirements include a midterm exam, one short
paper (3–5 pages), one longer paper (8–10 pages),
and a presentation.
ENGL 20532. City Streets, City Beats: Belfast,
Dublin, London, and Paris from Baudelaire to
Bono
(3-0-3) Arbery
As one of the most dominant themes of modernity,
the city figures as a poster child of trendsetters,
go-getters, floozies, and philanderers. It is the embodiment of shabby chic. Wherever there’s couture
there are cutthroats, and if there’s a ballroom there’s
bound to be a bordello. Baudelaire?s Paris sets the
tone for the modern city’s fast-paced but staggering
tempo, and 150 years later, it can still be heard in
Bono’s gravelly tones and nostalgic lyrics. This course
focuses on four cities intimately connected through
literature, art, music, and film. It will study both
their tense political and social relationships with
one another as well as their idiosyncratic cultures
and geographies (including their landmarks, streets,
transportation and water systems, etc.), and will
think about the resonance of these cities’ histories on
global, contemporary culture.
Readings include selections from Baudelaire and
Apollinaire, works by Padraic O Conaire, Joseph
Conrad, James Joyce, Liam O’ Flaherty, Samuel
Beckett, Virginia Woolf, Elizabeth Bowen, John
Banville, and Michael McLaverty, and selected poems from Seamus Heaney, John Montague, Derek
Mahon, and Ciaran Carson. Photos, paintings, and
song lyrics will supplement the readings, and there
will also be a few movie showings. Course requirements include class participation, weekly quizzes,
one 10–12 page paper, and a midterm.
ENGL 20601. Early Modern American Fiction
(3-0-3)
An examination of selected literatures written between the Civil War and World War II, specifically
focusing on how this fiction shows the impact of
economic and technological transformations on
religious beliefs, conceptions of human identity, and
work environments and men’s and women’s places
in them.
ENGL 20602. Readings in Nineteenth-Century
American Literature
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on major literary figures and
works of 19th-century America, focusing chiefly on
the two decades before the Civil War, a period often
hailed as the first flowering of a genuine “American”
literature.
ENGL 20603. Readings in Early American
Literature
(3-0-3)
Close examination of selected works written by
Americans from the 17th century through the Civil
War.
ENGL 20703. Passing in Twentieth-Century
American Literature
(3-0-3)
Interracial relationships as depicted in the writings of
black and white American writers.
ENGL 20704. Contemporary Short Fiction
(3-0-3)
A study of short stories and novellas written in the
last half of the 20th century.
ENGL 20705. The Criminal in American
Literature
(3-0-3)
A survey of “criminals” in American literature.
ENGL 20706. Readings in American Novels
(3-0-3)
Close readings of selected novels of significant importance within the American literary tradition.
ENGL 20707. American Novel
(3-0-3)
Novels from Hawthorne to Morrison.
ENGL 20708. The City in American Literature
ENGL 20604. American Fiction
(3-0-3)
An exploration of selected novels, written by a variety of American authors, that consider the question
“what characteristics and values define ‘American’
‘identity’?”
(3-0-3)
Literary representations of the city and social identity
in American texts from the 1890s to the present,
including Riis, Dreiser, Wharton, Sinclair, Yezierska,
Wright, Paley, and Cisneros, as well as contemporaneous nonfiction and films
ENGL 20605. American Literature: Varieties of
Religious Experience
ENGL 20717. Modernism, Life-Writing, and the
Politics of Everyday Life
(3-0-3)
Many American authors are skeptical toward religion, yet they are, nonetheless, preoccupied with
the religious experience. This course explores the
relationship between these attitudes in American
literature.
ENGL 20606. American Women Writers to
1930
(3-0-3)
A close reading of “major” and “minor” American
women writers of the 18th, 19th, and early 20th
centuries.
ENGL 20626. American War Literature
(3-0-3)
Beginning with Mary Rowlandson’s captivity narrative and ending with Tim O’Brien’s The Things They
Carried, an exploration of the aesthetic, historical,
and theoretical functions and values of war writing
in the United States.
ENGL 20702. Travel in American Literature
(3-0-3)
A close examination of the theme of “travel” in
American literature from the Puritans to the present, focusing on literatures written by slaves seeking
freedom, settlers in search of fertile land, Native
Americans forced from ancestral homes, and other
characters seeking “freedom” or a return to “home.”
(3-0-3) Davis
A close study of modernist personal narratives.
ENGL 20800. Ethnic Identities
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the interconnectedness among
literatures of prominent authors from the Americas,
Africa, England, and the Caribbean.
ENGL 20801. African-American Literature and
the Bible
(3-0-0)
An examination of the Bible, from Genesis to the
Gospel writers’ parables of Jesus, and how these
Hebrew and Christian stories inspired AfricanAmerican artists.
ENGL 20802. Twentieth-Century Ethnic
American Novels
(3-0-3)
An exploration, based on the theme of memory, of
several ethnic American novels, specifically the ways
in which remembering one’s own or one’s ancestors’
past becomes part of one’s self-identification as an
ethnic American.
ENGL 20803. A Survey of Black Women
Writing in America
(3-0-3)
This course is designed to familiarize students with
the diverse concerns of Black women’s writing from
the first novel written in 1854 through the present.
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ENGL 20804. Testimonios
(3-0-3)
“Testimonios” are statements or testaments by
women and about their lives, and this course will
explore Latinas’ testimonios as literature, life stories,
and “holy” texts.
ENGL 20805. Twentieth-Century Ethnic
American Novels
heroines of the Americas (including those with
origins in Native American, Latino/Latina, African,
Asian and European cultures).
ENGL 20813. Latino/a Poetry
(3-0-3)
Close readings of prominent contemporary Latino
poets.
(3-0-3)
An exploration, based on the theme of memory, of
several ethnic American novels, specifically the ways
in which remembering one’s own or one’s ancestors’
past becomes part of one’s self-identification as an
ethnic American.
ENGL 20814. Introduction to African-American
Literature
ENGL 20806. Latin American Images of the
United States
(3-0-3) Irving
An introduction to cultural studies using a variety of
media: literature, film, and music.
(3-0-3)
Drawing upon a wide variety of sources-novels, essays, poems, travel literature, social science texts,
film, art, etc.—a survey of Latin American views
of North American society, customs, politics, and
individual character, with a particular emphasis on
United States interventionism.
ENGL 20807. The Harlem Renaissance
(3-0-3)
A study of the historical, cultural, and political
circumstances that led to the flowering of AfricanAmerican literature in the ’20s and early ’30s and
the writers it fostered: Hughes, Hurston, Toomer,
Redmon Fauset, Larson, Thurman.
ENGL 20808. Latino- and Latina-American
Literature
(3-0-3)
Studies of Latino and Latina authors, including Chicano, Caribbean, or South American.
ENGL 20809. West Indian Poetry
(3-0-3)
Poems from the many languages and cultures of the
Caribbean region.
ENGL 20810. African-American Migration
Narratives
(3-0-3)
Life writings and issues of self-representation in the
African-American expressive cultural tradition in the
19th and 20th centuries.
ENGL 20811. Women in the Americas
(3-0-3)
A survey of a wide variety of literature (fiction,
poetry, testimonio, personal essay, autobiography,
critical essay, and oral history) and film written by
and about women in the Americas from the time of
conquest/encounter to the present.
ENGL 20812. Icons and Action Figures in
Latino/Latina Literature
(3-0-3)
Understanding US Latino/Latina literature, art, and
film through its many allusions to and re-interpretations of traditional icons and historic figures as well
as legends, myths, popular figures, and action heroes/
(3-0-3)
A survey of 300 years of African-American literature.
ENGL 20822. Beats, Rhymes, and Life: An
Introduction to Cultural Studies
ENGL 20828. Tropical Heat Waves:
Contemporary Latino/a and Caribbean
Literature
(3-0-3) Rohrleitner
A review of selected contemporary Latino/a and
Caribbean novels.
ENGL 20838. Twentieth-Century American
Feminist Fiction
(3-0-3) Brogan
Close readings of major 20th-century novels, written
by both men and women, which may be accurately
described as “feminist.”
ENGL 20840. Perfoming Personality:
Democratic Selves in the Public Sphere
(3-0-3) Shortall
From the Salem witchcraft trials to the 1960s, how
Americans created, discovered, and performed their
“American” identities through public social formations such as audiences, traditions, political orders,
reform movements, churches, friendships, and cities.
ENGL 20902. Introduction to Linguistics
(3-0-3)
Study of the basic forms and syntax of the English
language with application to teaching, writing, and
literature.
ENGL 20903. Introduction to Post-Colonial
Literature
(3-0-3)
Traces the development of literatures from the former colonies of various empires, but principally the
British and French.
ENGL 21001. National Cinema: Irish Cinema/
Culture Lab
(0-3-0)
Film lab/co-req for ENGL 20502.
ENGL 22514. Introduction to Irish Writers/
Discussion
(3-1-0)
Co-req for ENGL 20513 and 20514.
ENGL 27999. Special Studies
(V-0-V)
Independent study under the direction of a faculty
member. Does not fulfill a college literature or fine
arts requirement.
ENGL 30011. Fiction Writing for English Majors
(3-0-3) O’Rourke
An intensive fiction workshop exclusively for English
majors.
ENGL 30012. Poetry Writing for English
Majors
(3-0-3) Menes
A intensive poetry workshop exclusively for English
majors.
ENGL 30110. British Literary Traditions I
(3-0-3) Frese, Nolan
Intensive survey of British writers and literary forms
from the beginnings through the Renaissance.
ENGL 30111. British Literary Traditions II
(3-0-3) Fox
Intensive survey of British writers and literary forms
of the 18th and 19th centuries.
ENGL 30115. American Literary Traditions I
(3-0-3) Hendler, Werge
Introduction to American literature from its beginnings through the Civil War, emphasizing important
figures, literary forms, and cultural movements.
ENGL 30116. American Literary Traditions II
(3-0-3) Krier
Introduction to American literature from the Civil
War through the 20th century, emphasizing important figures, literary forms, and cultural movements.
ENGL 30301. Methods: Literary Texts in
Context
(3-0-3)
This course will investigate the relationship between
literary works and their cultural and historical
context, focusing specifically on how the expansion (and, eventually, disintegration) of the British
Empire influenced literary production. By looking at
how the literary text reflects or transforms the ideas
behind it, we will work toward an understanding of
how and why literature becomes and remains culturally significant.
ENGL 30302. Methods: Introduction to Critical
Theory
(3-0-3)
An introduction to methods of literary study
through contemporary theories of literature, emphasizing Continental approaches: Saussure, Derrida,
Foucault, Freud, Lacan, Said, and others, applied
to Joyce.
ENGL 30303. Methods: Approaches to
Otherness: The American Context
(3-0-3) ]Baldwin
This course explores different theoretical approaches
to conventional categories of “otherness.”
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ENGL 30304. Methods: Interpretation of
1850s’ America
(3-0-3)
A close reading of three or four widely discussed
American literary texts from the 1850s—perhaps
Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s
Cabin, Melville’sBenito Cereno, and Jacobs’s Incidents
in the Life of a Slave Girl—in an attempt to explore a
range of critical approaches to analyzing each.
ENGL 30305. Methods: Reading Ulysses
(3-0-3) Johnson-Roullier
This course explores various ways to read literature
by employing different theoretical approaches to
study James Joyce’s most famous text.
ENGL 30306. Methods: Writing about
Literature
(3-0-3)
An intensive study of the “nuts and bolts” of reading, discussing, and writing about literary texts: the
fundamentals of reading and writing about literature; the reading of texts within various contexts,
such as other literary texts by the same author and
other texts of the same genre; and the introduction
of various critical approaches employed to analyze
literature.
ENGL 30307. Methods: Paradise Lost
(3-0-3)
A “hands-on” introduction to literary scholarship
through an exploration of John Milton’s Paradise Lost
and its subsequent reception in 19th- and 20thcentury England and America.
ENGL 30308. Methods: Hemingway and
Walker
(3-0-3)
A study of six different critical approaches to interpreting literary texts through the subsequently different (or overlapping?) ways of evaluating four works
of literature, two by Ernest Hemingway and two by
Alice Walker.
ENGL 30309. Methods: Close Reading—
Poetry
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the study of literature through
learning how to read poetry, with close attention to
details of sound and sense.
ENGL 30310. Methods: Feminist Literary
Studies
ENGL 30312. Methods: Narrative and Memory
(3-0-3)
Close reading of a selected group of literatures to explore the force of memory (and of the related issues
of history, remembrance, public commemoration,
and memoir), supplemented by a variety of critical,
theoretical, and historical approaches.
ENGL 30313. Methods: Forms Close Reading
(3-0-3) Huk
An examination of the cultural and philosophical
reasons for close-reading’s birth in its modern form,
its devaluation after mid-century, and its very recent
come-back status in a practice that, though not yet
fully developed, seems to wish to synthesize many of
the opposing practices that have gone before it.
ENGL 30315. Methods: Caribbean Voices
(3-0-3)
Through close analysis of several Caribbean voices,
students will explore issues such as silence, voice,
and language in cultural representation, the relation
of these issues to cultural identity, and the shaping
of such identity, to come to an understanding of the
larger implications of Caribbean literature.
ENGL 30316. Methods: Reading for the Plot
(3-0-3)
Through readings and re-readings of a few long Victorian and modern novels, this course will examine
how literary works can be read through a variety of
critical lenses.
ENGL 30317. Methods: Natives and Novels
(3-0-3)
A close examination of the concepts of “natives” and
“outsiders” in selected English Victorian novels.
ENGL 30318. Methods: Latino Literature
(3-0-3)
Using various Latino/a literary texts, students will
gain insights and experience into the models and
methodologies one uses in analyzing literary texts as
an English major.
ENGL 30319. Methods: Poetry and Prayer
(3-0-3)
Through close readings of a wide range of poems
that are also prayers, from medieval lyrics to contemporary verse, an investigation to determine if there
exists a connection between poetry and prayer or if
the two are radically incompatible.
(3-0-3)
Introduces English majors to literary study by examining the many ways in which the concerns of the
feminist movement have influenced the interpretation of works of literature.
ENGL 30325. Methods: American
Renaissance
ENGL 30311. Methods: Woolf and Bloomsbury
ENGL 40011. Advanced Fiction Writing
(3-0-3)
A close investigation of the novels, essays, art, and
political writings of some of the members of “The
Bloomsbury Group,” including Virginia Woolf,
E.M. Forster, Roger Fry, and Leonard Woolf.
(3-0-3) Wilson
An introduction to several methods of literary critical
inquiry using texts of the American renaissance.
(3-0-3)
An advanced fiction writing workshop.
ENGL 40012. Advanced Fiction Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A seminar in the students’ own writing of prose fiction; for students with previous experience or course
work in writing.
ENGL 40013. Advanced Fiction Writing
(3-0-3)
A seminar in the students’ own writing of prose fiction; for students with previous experience or course
work in writing.
ENGL 40014. Advanced Fiction Writing
(3-0-3)
A seminar in the students’ own writing of prose fiction; for students with previous experience or course
work in writing.
ENGL 40015. Advanced Fiction Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A seminar in the students’ own writing of prose fiction; for students with previous experience or course
work in writing.
ENGL 40031. Advanced Poetry Writing
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An advanced poetry writing workshop.
ENGL 40032. Advanced Poetry Writing
(3-0-3)
An advanced poetry writing workshop.
ENGL 40033. Creative Versions: Art of
Translation
(3-0-3)
This course provides the tools necessary for meaningful translation of Spanish texts to English.
ENGL 40071. Writing Nonfiction
(3-0-3) Temple
The techniques of nonfiction writing—from the
basic journalistic news story to the magazine feature
to the personal essay.
ENGL 40093. Writing the Family
(3-0-3)
A nonfiction writing workshop in which students
will learn how to access family stories through oral
history and genealogical research, and to use the raw
materials of these stories as the basis or starting point
of publishable fiction or poetry.
ENGL 40101. Greek and Roman Mythology
(3-0-3)
The major mythical tales and figures from the classical world that have influenced world literature.
Study of the Olympic and vegetation cults. Homer
and Hesiod, national and local myth, Syncretism,
Mysteries.
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ENGL 40103. Images of War and Peace in
Literature
(3-0-3)
Using English-language novels and poetry of the
20th century, an examination of the metaphors and
themes that unmask the realities of war, and how
the texts themselves become battlegrounds on which
the human imagination both creates an individual’s
sense of self and constructs and deconstructs cultural
ideologies.
ENGL 40104. Dramatic Literature since 1900
(3-0-3)
An advanced survey of theatrical literature and criticism since the beginning of the 20th century. Students will read one to two plays per week along with
selected secondary critical literature.
ENGL 40105. Irony
(3-0-3)
A survey of the irony in a variety of Western
literatures.
ENGL 40106. Greek Tragedy
(3-0-3) McLaren
This advanced course in literature provides detailed
study of the theory and practice of classical Greek
tragedy. The structures and sensibilities that inform
tragedy are assessed, with special attention to plays
written by the three great tragedians, Aeschylus,
Sophocles, and Euripides. The Greeks’ own responses
to tragedy, as represented by Aristophanes, Plato, and
Aristotle, are also discussed. The form and function
of Greek tragic plays, their place in classical culture,
and their distinctive approach to issues of human life
are key topics of the course.
ENGL 40107. Religion and Literature
(3-0-3)
A close analysis of the forms, ideas, and preoccupations of both the religious imagination in literature
and of the historical relationships between religious
faith and traditions in particular literary works.
ENGL 40108. Dramatic Literature before 1900
(3-0-3)
An advanced survey of theatrical literature and criticism from the earliest plays to the beginning of the
20th century. Students will read one to two plays per
week along with selected secondary critical literature.
ENGL 40109. Literature Masterpieces from
Africa
ENGL 40111. Faith in a Changed World
(3-0-3)
A close, formal analysis of the English translation of
the Bible (King James Version), focusing the distinctive poetic and literary qualities of theme, image,
myth, and narrative form.
ENGL 40112. Understanding Story
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): ENGL 41001
An investigation of the shape(s), purposes, and
multiple meanings of narratives both in the lives of
individuals and within institutions and cultures by
sampling the work of journalists in reporting news as
story, medical professionals in collecting case histories, ethnographers in describing unfamiliar cultural
practices or investigating inter-group or inter-state
conflict situations, historians in interpreting the
past, political leaders in establishing public policy
and political power, and advertising and marketing
interests.
ENGL 40113. Literature of Southern Africa
(3-0-3)
A study of the literary culture of Southern Africa
in the last 25 years of the 20th century, specifically
the ways in which individual writers confronted
the apartheid regime and their responses to the new
South Africa in the post-apartheid period.
ENGL 40114. Latin Literature in Translation
(3-0-3)
This is a survey, in lecture/discussion format, of selected works of Classical Latin literature. In addition
to close reading of the texts, we routinely give attention to the socio-cultural worlds that produced Latin
literature and to the character of Latin literature’s
abiding influence in Christian antiquity, the Middle
Ages, the Renaissance and early modern periods, and
modern cultures. Weekly quizzes, biweekly essays,
and a final.
ENGL 40115. Bible and Literary Theory
(3-0-3)
An intense focus on the distinctive poetic and literary qualities of the English translation of the Bible
(King James Version) through close formal analysis
and through discussions of theme, image, myth, and
narrative form.
ENGL 40116. Classical Epic
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the diversity of literatures from
the African continent.
(3-0-3)
A study of the epic literature of classical antiquity in
English translation, this course will give students a
solid grasp of the texts of the classical epics and the
cultural contexts in which they were set.
ENGL 40110. Studies in Comedy
ENGL 40117. In Parables
(3-0-3)
A multimedia examination of recurring patterns and
themes in comedy.
(3-0-3)
This seminar takes as its primary focus the parables
of Jesus, and seeks to examine their literary structure.
We will read a broad selection of Jesus’ parables and
consider how they have been rewritten by later prose
writers and poets. Finally, we will read new parables
and ideas about parables by Kafka and Borges.
ENGL 40118. Philosophy and Literature
Seminar
(4-0-4)
This intensive four-credit seminar is the introduction
to the concentration in philosophy and literature and
will pursue interdisciplinary approaches to literary,
theoretical, and philosophical texts.
ENGL 40119. Monsters to Cyborgs
(3-0-3)
A critical analysis of monsters, cyborgs, and other
“created bodies” in literature.
ENGL 40120. Greek Literature and Culture
(3-0-3) Schlegel
This course surveys the leading works of ancient
Greek literature and examines the cultural contexts
in which they were written, received, and transmitted. Students read poetry and prose from many
genres, and sample works from a thousand years of
extraordinary literary creativity. Among the authors
introduced are Homer, Sappho, Aeschylus, Herodotus, Aristophanes, Plato, Theocritus, Plutarch, Lucian, and Longus. Special attention is paid to the
formal structures of Greek literary works, the cultural issues they raise, and the lasting value of Greek
literature to the modern age. The course prepares
students for more advanced work in classical literature and culture. Offered annually.
ENGL 40121. The Art and Literature of
Metamorphosis
(3-0-3) Bloomer
This course begins with a critical study of Ovid’s
great poem, the Metamorphoses. The poem itself
became a subject of metamorphosis in poetry and art
in the hands of such figures as Statius, Dante, Botticelli, Bernini, Rembrandt, Hughes, and Heaney.
The course addresses the modeling of transformation
within the literary text by examining first Ovid and
his sources, and second, adaptations of his poem by
writers such as Shakespeare and Kafka. Connections
with folklore, magic, and religion are explored. The
graphic arts receive equal consideration as the course
explores how Ovid’s ideas of the transformation of
the body, the capacity of the human body for allegory, and the fragility of identity have influenced
later artists and authors.
ENGL 40122. Love, Death, and Exile in Arabic
Literature and Cinema
(3-0-3) Guo
This course explores literary and artistic presentation
of the themes of “love, death, and exile” in Arabic
literature and popular culture from pre-Islamic era
to the present day. Through close readings of Arabic
poetry, essays, short stories, and novels (in English
translation), and analyzing a number of Arabic movies (with English subtitles), we discuss the following
issues: themes and genres of classical Arabic love
poetry; gender, eroticism, and sexuality in Arabic literary discourse; alienation, fatalism, and the motif of
Al-hanin ila al-watan (nostalgia for one’s homeland)
in modern Arabic poetry and fiction.
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ENGL 40123. Canon and Literature of Islam
(3-0-3) Afsaruddin
This course is an introduction to the fundamental
religious texts and literature of Islam. The list includes the Qur’an (the central, sacred scripture of Islam), the Hadith (record of the speech and actions of
the Prophet Muhammad), biography of the Prophet,
exegetical literature, historical texts, mystical and
devotional literature. Students will read primary texts
in English translation with a focused discussion and
analysis of form, content, historical background,
religious significance, and literary allusions of the
various texts. Themes such as “the unity and majesty
of God,” “prophecy and revelation,” “good and evil,”
“this world and the hereafter” will be dealt with in
the lectures and conversation in class. The course
places heavy emphasis on class discussion and student preparedness.
ENGL 40124. Japanese Literature in the
1990s
(3-0-3) Bowen-Stryuk
Japanese Literature in the 1990s looks at the Japanese literary boom of the ’90s as a literary project
of re-remembering the past and intervening in the
present. In the last decade-and-a-half, Japan has
undergone a transformation from the ieconomic
miraclei of the ’60s and ’70s to economic recession, and with the recession, many of the values
that helped to sustain high economic growth have
come to be questioned: strict gender differentiation,
dedication to the company for men and to the home
for women, frugality, sacrifice of the personal for
the social, emphasis on high growth policies at the
risk of the environment, a resurgence in narratives
of national homogeneity, etc. In this course, we will
look at work by Japanese writers from the beginning
of the recession until today, thinking about the way
writers are problematizing previous homogenous notions of gender, ethnicity, and race; raising questions
about the costs of high economic growth on society’s
subalterns; rethinking the emblem of that growth,
the salaryman, who has lately become a favorite butt
of dissatisfaction; rethinking the as-of-yet unresolved
significance of an ambitious and often cruel imperialist war on the Asian mainland; and finally, we
will think about the significance of globalization and
nationalism in Japanese literature.
ENGL 40129. Brothers Karamazov
(5-0-3) Gasperetti
No prerequisite. This course is a multifaceted investigation into the philosophical, political, psychological, religious, and literary determinants of Fyodor
Dostoevsky’s longest and most complex novel, The
Brothers Karamazov. Emphasis is placed on daily,
in-depth discussions based on a close reading of the
text. Additional assignments illuminate a variety
of themes in the novel, from the author’s visionary
political predictions and rejection of West European
materialism to his critique of rationalism and insistence on the link between faith and morality.
ENGL 40139. The Individual in NineteenthCentury Literature
(3-0-3) Gasperetti
This course analyzes a seminal transition in Western
society as it moves from an agrarian world centered
around the rural estate to an urban culture built on
industry and commerce. Literary texts emphasize the
physical, psychological, and moral consequences to
the individual of the decline of the estate, the rise of
capitalism, the nontraditional nature of life and work
in the city, various challenges to the established order
(socialism, anarchism), and changing notions of
gender. Texts include Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe;
Nikolai Gogol, “The Overcoat”; Eugene Sue, The
Mysteries of Paris (excerpts); Leo Tolstoy, Childhood;
Charles Dickens, Hard Times; Horatio Alger, Ragged
Dick; Emile Zola, Germinal; and Henrik Ibsen, A
Doll’s House. Nonliterary texts used to support the
literary depiction of the era include John Locke,
“Of Property”; Adam Smith, The Wealth Of Nations
(excerpts); Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, The
Communist Manifesto; and Henry Mayhew, London
Labour and the London Poor (excerpts).
ENGL 40190. Literacy, Schooling, Society
(3-0-3)
An examination of several histories of education,
with particular emphasis on English studies, and
how these histories have helped to shape culture.
ENGL 40191. Perspectives on Literacy
(3-0-3)
What it means to be “literate” and the conditions
that enable literacy to flourish.
ENGL 40192. Introduction to Linguistics
(3-0-3)
An examination of both the technical aspects of linguistics (phonetic transcription, morphology, syntax,
etc.) as they relate to the development of the English
language and the applications of linguistics to the
study of literature.
ENGL 40193. Classical Rhetoric in Our Time
(3-0-3)
First half of a yearlong survey of the history of
rhetoric.
ENGL 40194. Writing Center Theory/Practice
(1-0-1) Duffy
A one-credit course for students interested in tutoring in the University Writing Program.
ENGL 40196. The Teaching of Writing
(3-0-3) Kinney
A theory- and practice-based course in the teaching
of writing to junior and high school students.
ENGL 40201. Chaucer and the City
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the idea of “the city” in Chaucer’s
work by looking at the cities he does represent (Troy,
London) in his work, by examining his relationship
to urban forms of cultural expression (mystery cycles,
mummings, processions), and by investigating city
life in 14th-century London.
ENGL 40205. Shakespeare and the
Supernatural
(3-0-3)
An examination of the supernatural in Shakespeare.
ENGL 40206. Advanced Topics in Theatre
Studies
(3-0-3) Holland
Corequisite(s): FTT 41600
This course explores the phenomenon of Shakespeare and film, concentrating on the ranges of
meaning provoked by the conjunction. We shall be
looking at examples of films of Shakespeare plays
both early and recent, both in English and in other
languages, and both ones that stick close to conventionalized and historicized conceptualizations
of Shakespeare and adaptations at varying degrees
of distance towards the erasure of Shakespeare from
the text. The transposition of different forms of
Shakespearean textualities (printed, theatrical, filmic)
and the confrontation with the specificities of film
produce a cultural phenomenon whose cultural
meanings—meaning as Shakespeare and meaning
as film—will be the subject of our investigations.
There will be regular (though not necessarily weekly)
screenings of the films to be studied.
ENGL 40208. British Drama 1660–1775
(3-0-3)
Close readings of British dramatic literature created
between the Restoration of Charles II in 1660 to the
production of Sheridan’s THE RIVALS in 1775.
ENGL 40210. Shakespeare Performance:
HENRY V
(20-0-6) Rathburn
This is a unique, team-taught course, to which
students are admitted by audition only. Enrolled
students will receive a stipend, a three-credit-hour
tuition remission, and an acting role in the summer
2001 production of Much Ado about Nothing.
ENGL 40211. History of the English Language
(3-0-3) O’Keeffe
This course is designed to introduce students to the
historical development of the English language, from
its earliest recorded appearance to its current state as
a world language.
ENGL 40212. Introduction to Old English
(3-0-3) O’Keeffe
Training in reading the Old English language and
study of the literature written in Old English.
ENGL 40213. Readings in Medieval Literature
(3-0-3)
Close readings of selected Medieval literary texts
written by men and women written between 500
and 1500 ACE.
ENGL 40214. Falling in Love in the Middle
Ages
(3-0-3)
This course attempts to explore the variety of medieval representations of love, and to show how they
are intimately bound up with questions of free will
and destiny, gender relations, the secularization of
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learning, time, and eternity.
ENGL 40215. Milton
(3-0-3)
This course includes close readings of Milton’s work,
from all stages of his career, and discussions of his
highly self-conscious attempt to make himself into
England’s greatest poet.
ENGL 40216. Mother Love
(3-0-3)
A close reading of medium-length story-making poems (shorter than epics, longer than lyrics) with an
eye to their handling of matters related to maternity,
covering texts from the Homeric Hymn to Demeter
and Claudian’s The Rape of Proserpina to excerpts
from Virgil’s Georgics to poetic works of the
Renaissance.
ENGL 40217. Tudor-Stuart Drama
(3-0-3)
A survey of Tudor-Stuart drama.
ENGL 40218. Renaissance and Romantic
Lyric
(3-0-3)
A study of the development of lyric poetry from the
late 16th century up through the mid-19th century.
ENGL 40219. Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales
(3-0-3)
Chaucer’s masterwork, studied in its original Middle
English.
ENGL 40220. Love and Gender in the
Renaissance
(3-0-3)
Examining works by Sydney, Spenser, Shakespeare,
Marvell, Donne, and others, this course discusses
how cultural understandings of gender influence the
depiction of love.
ENGL 40221. Beowulf: Text and Culture
ENGL 40225. Shakespeare in Performance
(3-0-3)
An introduction to Japanese classical theater—Noh,
Kyogen, Bunraku, and Kabuki—through readings
and videotapes of selected plays.
ENGL 40226. Shakespeare I
ENGL 40312. Victorian Fiction
ENGL 40228. Restoration, Early EighteenthCentury Literature
(3-0-3)
A close reading of Hopkins’s major poems, and a
careful attention to their literary and religious contexts.
(3-0-3)
Questions of the developing interest in the concept
of “human nature” in late 17th- and early 18thcentury literature: What does it means to be human?
Are humans “animals”? Are humans “naturally” selfish or benevolent? Are gender differences natural or
cultural? What sort of obligations do humans have
to the rest of the creation? What is the relation of
the sort of innocence that the pope imagined as “the
eternal sunshine of the spotless mind” to mature
development?
ENGL 40229. Shakespeare’s Religions
(3-0-3) Lander
A critical analysis of religious influences and iconography in selected Shakespeare plays.
ENGL 40250. Medieval Visions
(3-0-3)
A survey of Medieval literature, excluding Chaucer.
ENGL 40306. Irish and British Literature,
1790–1815
(3-0-3)
Burke, Paine, Godwin, Wordsworth, Edgeworth,
and Scott in the context of the French Revolution
and the Irish political situation at the end of the
18th century.
ENGL 40307. European Modernist Novel
ENGL 40222. Medieval Drama
(3-0-3)
Beginning with The Symposium and ending with
selected modernist writings, how Eros has appeared
and been expressed in the West.
ENGL 40224. Dante
(3-0-3)
A study of The Divine Comedy, with special attention
to the history of ideas, the nature of mimesis and allegory, and Dante’s sacramental vision of life.
(3-0-3)
Novels by Braddon, Eliot, and James in the context
of art, science, and their place in a changing social
structure.
(3-0-3)
First half of a year-long survey of the works of Shakespeare, beginning with Two Gentlemen of Verona and
concluding with Henry V.
(3-0-3)
Using a glossed text of Beowulf in Old English, an
examination of a wide range of critical and cultural
issues: What relationship do we expect between
“heroic” texts and the society which produced and
enjoyed them? What cultural investments of our own
lead us to read certain Old English texts and not others? How did Beowulf receive canonical status? What
is a translation? And what strategies of reading can
we bring to a thousand-year old poem?
(3-0-3)
A study of the literary, theatrical, and religious
imaginations of medieval dramatic texts through
readings, critical writing, discussion, and enactments
of these texts.
ENGL 40311. Victorian Literature: Science
and Art
(3-0-3)
An introduction to modernism as it formed in
Europe.
ENGL 40308. Twice-Told Tales
(3-0-3)
How a fiction might exist as a critical reconstruction
or a re-vision of an other (previous?) work.
ENGL 40309. Love and the Novel
ENGL 40310. Visits to Bedlam
(3-0-3)
Literary, medical, and social views of madness in the
18th century.
(3-0-3)
An examination of major Victorian novels.
ENGL 40314. Hopkins and the Jesuits
ENGL 40317. The Victorian National Romance
(3-0-3)
By examining texts from the different nations within
the British Isles—Scotland, Ireland, and England—we will explore the complex question of how
national boundaries are drawn, how a sense of membership in a nation is created, and what that might
have to do with falling in love, getting married, and
staying married.
ENGL 40318. Religious Poetry: Herbert and
Hopkins
(3-0-3)
A close examination of the religious origins and
underpinnings in, and of, the poetry of Herbert and
Hopkins.
ENGL 40319. Virtue, Sex, and the Good Life
(3-0-3)
A thematic analysis of “virtue” in selected 18th-century novels: How should I behave? Am I completely
independent or should I rely on the advice of others?
Am I defined by my birth or do I make myself? If
“virtue” is a guide, what exactly is “virtue”? Is virtue
really possible in a highly mobile society that values
change above stability?
ENGL 40320. Dandies, Decadents, and New
Women
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the three major literary movements in Britain—the Aesthetic Movement, Decadence, and the New Woman novel—in the later half
of the 19th century.
ENGL 40329. British Romanticism
(3-0-3)
A close examination of the literary movement known
as Romanticism.
ENGL 40333. Romanticism and Revolution
(3-0-3)
The relationship between the Romantic movement
and rebellions against governments around the
world.
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ENGL 40335. Nineteenth-Century British
Victorian Literature
(3-0-3)
A survey of selected works of 19th-century Victorian
literature.
ENGL 40339. The Very Long Victorian Novel
(3-0-3) Maurer
A close reading of selected 19th-century British
novels.
ENGL 40340. Celebrity, Scandal, and
Obscurity: The Nineteenth-Century Poet
(3-0-3) Mahoney
How 19th-century British Victorian poets courted,
simultaneosuly, celebrity, scandal, and obscurity.
ENGL 40403. Studies in Modern Poetry
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on four highly important and
innovative, though still often underrated, poets:
Velimir Khlebnikov, Gertrude Stein, Mina Loy, and
Miron Biaoszewski.
ENGL 40404. Early British Modernism
(3-0-3)
An analysis of the early stages of British Modernism
as the novel shifted (in some cases) away from the
predominant forms of Victorian Realism and toward
the more experimental structures of the early 20th
century.
ENGL 40405. Postmodern British Poetry
(3-0-3)
Study of competing galaxies of late-20th-century
British poets, for whom more than art was at stake:
agendas of race, gender, region, class, and other cultural materials.
ENGL 40406. Methods: T.S. Eliot
(3-0-3)
A close reading of Eliot’s religious poetry, principally
his “Four Quartets.”
ENGL 40407. Seminar: The Modern
Revolution
(3-0-3)
A focus on the first quarter of 20th-century British
literature in order to tease out the relationships between revolutions in art and seismic social change.
ENGL 40408. Five Modern Poets
(3-0-3)
Close readings of three British—David Jones, W.H.
Auden, and Geoffrey Hill—and two Irish poets—
W.B. Yeats and Seamus Heaney.
ENGL 40410. Existentialism: Philosophy and
Literature
(3-0-3)
We will read representative literary and philosophical
texts by Sartre (excerpts from B, Nausea, a few plays),
Beauvoir (The Philosophy f Ambiguity, excerpts from
The Second Sex, A Very Easy Death, a novel and/or
excerpts from A Memoir), and Camus (Myth of
Sisyphus, excerpts from The Rebel, The Stranger, The
Plague, and/or The Fall).
ENGL 40411. Twentieth-Century British
Women Writers
(3-0-3)
Modern and postmodern fiction (and some nonfiction prose) by British women. Authors may include
Woolf, Butts, Rhys, Cunard, Richardson, Carrington, West, Mansfield, Carter, and Winterson.
ENGL 40412. Twentieth-Century British Novels
(3-0-3)
In looking at several British novels, each published at
different moment of the 20th century, students will
explore how art, in this case literature, engaged, or
did not engage, the social world.
ENGL 40419. Gender, Sexuality, and Literacy
Experiment in Post-War British and Irish
Poetry
(3-0-3) Huk
An analysis of British and Irish poetry written after
War War Two.
ENGL 40501. Contemporary Irish Drama
(3-0-3)
A close analysis of the dramatic literature produced
by Irish playwrights during the latter half of the 20th
century.
ENGL 40503. Anglo-Irish Identities 1600–1800
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the complex and contested
cultural, political, and ideological identities of the
Anglo-Irish.
ENGL 40504. Gothic Images in Modern
Literature
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the ways in which such themes
as doubling, haunting, terror, and sexual anxiety,
themes that inhere in the Gothic novel, operate in
modernist fiction.
ENGL 40505. Studies in Six Irish Writers
(3-0-3)
W.B. Yeats, Elizabeth Brown, Bram Stoker, J.M.
Synge, Seamus Heaney, and Medbh McGuckian.
ENGL 40506. Modern Irish Drama
(3-0-3)
A study both the drama produced by the playwrights
of the Irish literary renaissance—W.B. Yeats, J.M.
Synge, Lady Gregory, and Sean O’Casey—and the
political struggle for Irish independence that was taking place at the same time.
ENGL 40509. Modern Irish Drama
(3-0-3)
In this course, we will study both the drama
produced by the playwrights of the Irish literary
renaissance—Yeats, Synge, Lady Gregory, and
O’Casey—and the political struggle for Irish independence that was taking place at the same time.
ENGL 40511. Irish Film and Culture
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): ENGL 41005
An examination of the dominant images of Ireland
in film and literature, and a review of development
in a wider cultural and historical context.
ENGL 40512. Versions of the Gothic
(3-0-3)
A survey of Gothic fiction in England and Ireland
fom the mid-18th century to the Victorian Age.
ENGL 40513. Culture and Politics in Northern
Ireland
(3-0-3)
Using a broad range of texts—drama, fiction, poetry,
film, painting, and documentary material—an examination of the politics of culture, and the cultures
of politics, in the North of Ireland during the 20th
century.
ENGL 40601. Voices of American
Renaissance
(3-0-3)
A focus on the trope of “voice” as it shaped the literatures of the American renaissance period through
an exploration of works by Emerson, Thoreau, Poe,
Dickinson, Whitman, Douglass, Melville, Stowe,
Hawthorne, and a number of lesser known authors
and oral performers.
ENGL 40602. Tragedy: Shakespeare and
Melville
(3-0-3) Staud
Using concepts of tragedy as a linking principle, this
course reads several Shakespearean plays and then
Moby-Dick, noting Shakespeare’s influence on the
American novelist.
ENGL 40603. Realism and Naturalism in
American Literature
(3-0-3)
An examination of American literature between the
Civil War and World War I in relation to the literary
movements known as realism and naturalism.
ENGL 40604. Nature in American Literature
(3-0-3)
This course examines the central and changing role
of nature in American literature, from the typological eschatology of the Puritans to the pop-culture
apocalypticism of Don DeLillo’s White Noise.
ENGL 40605. The American Scene
(3-0-3)
“To make much so much money that you won’t, that
you don’t mind, don’t mind anything—that is absolutely, I think, the main American formula.” Henry
James, The American Scene, 1907. “Greed, for lack
of a better word, is good, is right, it works...and it
will save that malfunctioning corporation called the
USA,” Gordon Gecko, Wall Street, 1987. After a 20year absence, Henry James returned to America to
examine the country of his birth. His tour brought
him to the above quoted and dismaying conclusion.
This course tries to contextualize and understand
James’s remark by placing it within a broader
atmosphere of late 19th- and early 20th-century
American culture. We’ll look at works that predate,
are contemporary with, and follow James’s American
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tour. We’ll look at works of literature and biography, of politics and philosophy, and of theology
and economics. Throughout, we will keep circling
around and back to James’s notion of “The Main
American Formula” and asking not only what exactly
he meant, but how other major thinkers of the age
understood or conceived of an “American Formula,”
and how that “formula” could be measured at the
level of the individual, the corporation, the country,
and, with Conrad’s Nostromo, the world. Readings
will include works of the following authors: Joseph
Conrad, Theodore Dreissner, Henry Ford, Henry
James, Theodore Roosevelt, Thorstein Veblen, and
Edith Wharton. In addition, we will view several
movies whose focus is directly related to the course’s
central questions.
ENGL 40606. Mark Twain
(3-0-3) Werge
A study of Twain’s life and writings in light of the
history of ideas and the literary, political, philosophical, and religious currents of 19th-century America.
ENGL 40701. The American Novel
(3-0-3) Werge
A consideration of the forms and preoccupations of
selected 19th- and 20th-century American novels,
with special attention to their major ideas and moral
concerns.
ENGL 40702. American Film
(3-0-3) Krier
Presentations and discussions of the several genres of
film produced in America since the early 1900s.
ENGL 40706. Lost Generation
(3-0-3)
This course studies the writings of authors, mostly
Americans, who achieved prominence in the 1920s:
Hemingway, Fitzgerald, H.D., Stein, Cummings,
Hughes, and others.
ENGL 40708. Poetry and Performance
(3-0-3)
An investigation of the meeting-ground of poetry,
conceptual art, new music, and performance art.
ENGL 40709. The American Novel between
the Two World Wars
(3-0-3)
This course pays particular attention to the different
social contexts from which narratives emerged in
order to see how novels participated in the contemporary cultural and political debates. Each of these
works probes some defining notion of American
identity, asking who or what constitutes “America.”
We will also attend to that question by discussing
each narrative’s formal characteristics and how they
meet the author’s aims.
ENGL 40710. Some Strains in TwentiethCentury American Fiction
(3-0-3)
This course studies the interconnections among six
of our best fiction writers of the last century, tracing
the dynamic aesthetic and moral development of
American fiction from Fitzgerald through Hemingway, Faulkner, Hurston, and Walker to Morrison.
ENGL 40711. Women’s Autobiography
ENGL 40715. American Religious Imagination
(3-0-3)
Beginning with Ralph Waldo Emerson and ending
with Harold Bloom, how Christianity has been refigured in America.
ENGL 40716. Crossing Color Lines
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the conflicted and contradictory
ways in which racial and ethnic identities have been
constructed and mediated in American culture.
ENGL 40717. American War Literature
(3-0-3)
Beginning with Mary Rowlandson’s captivity narrative and ending with Tim O’Brien’s The Things They
Carried, an exploration of the aesthetic, historical,
and theoretical functions and values of war writing
in the United States.
ENGL 40720. Manhattan: 1950–65
(3-0-3)
An examination of the vibrant Manhattan art community in the 1950s and 1960s, with a particular
emphasis on the intersections of poets and painters.
ENGL 40725. Class, Labor, and Narrative
(3-0-3) Sayers
This course explores the works of selected American
writers addressing class and labor.
ENGL 40730. Great American Novels
(3-0-3) Lee
Close readings of selected classic American novels.
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the complex relationships between
poetry, philosophy, and science at the end of the
19th century and the beginning of the 20th century
through American poets as evinced in the works of
Emily Dickinson, Robert Frost, and Wallace Stevens.
(3-0-3)
A close analysis of women’s life narratives and poetry,
based on the following questions: How do women’s
narratives affirm or challenge cultural norms? How
do concepts such as “high” and “low” art impact the
reading of women’s autobiographical literature? And
can lines be drawn between fiction and nonfiction
when studying autobiography?
ENGL 40735. Witnessing the Sixties in
America
ENGL 40704. Methods: Contemporary
American Poetry
ENGL 40712. American Fiction
ENGL 40740. Literature and Consumer
Culture
ENGL 40703. Poetry and Pragmatism
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the aesthetic, literary, and social
significance of poetry, focusing on such issues as
language itself, representation, history, power, and
gender.
(3-0-3)
A close examination of major mid-20th-century
American novelists.
ENGL 40705. Kerouac and the Beats
(3-0-3)
A close reading and analysis of all writers who made
presentations during the spring 2004 “And Now:
Literature as Contemporary Art” conference at Notre
Dame.
(3-0-3)
This seminar will re-examine Kerouac and his prose
in relation to Beat subculture and the larger context
of post-World War II American society. Although
the work of other Beat writers, such as William S.
Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, and Gary Snyder will be
considered, the primary focus will be on Kerouac.
Moreover, the seminar will question the cultural
codification of Kerouac as “King of the Beats” and
advance the notion that he was a prose artist on a
spiritual quest. Or, as Ginsberg aptly put it—an
“American lonely Prose Trumpeter of drunken Buddha Sacred Heart.”
ENGL 40713. And Now: Literature as
Contemporary Art
ENGL 40714. City in American Literature
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the connections between literary
representations of the city and social identity in a
variety of American literary texts from the 1890s to
the present.
(3-0-3) Giamo
Beginning with a review of post-World War Two authors, a close analysis of both fiction and nonfiction
written in America in the 1960s, with a particular
emphasis on the Vietnam experience and the development of the counter culture.
(3-0-3) Meissner
This course traces the social changes that accompanied America’s movement from early retailing to a
full-blown consumer culture. Beginning with representations from the later part of the 19th century,
particularly of the development of Chicago as a mail
order capital of the world and moving into the present through an examination of television shopping
networks, this course will use material from a variety
of perspectives and diciplines to examine what became a wholesale transformation of American life.
In attempting to trace the trajectory of change from
a country often identified by its rural isolation to
a country of relentless publicity, from the farm to
Paris Hilton, (who returned to The Simple Life), we
will look at a series of linkages each of which played
a specific and contributory role in the cultural shift
toward a fully saturated consumerism. For instance,
the early mail order catalogue empires of Aaron
Montgomery Ward and Richard Warren Sears depended on the capacity of the railroad and postal
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service to transport their goods from shopping catalogues to country kitchens, goods that went beyond
kitchen utensils, clothes, ornaments, and shoes to include assembly-ready homes. South Bend has several
Sears and Roebuck homes and part of our class time
will be spent in looking at these houses in the context of the course themes. All of our discussion will
take place against the backdrop of a larger question
about the democratization of desire, about whether
American culture became more or less democratic
after the introduction of the mail order catalogue.
Thus, the linkage between the cataloque, the home
shopping network, and the notion that freedom to
desire goods is a measure of democratic freedom. Of
course, the possibilites for manipulation and control
are also limitless.
ENGL 40745. Perspectives on Nature and
Environment in America
ENGL 40807. African-American Literature
(3-0-3)
A historical and thematic account of the rise and
achievement of African-American authors over several centuries.
ENGL 40808. Latino Poetry
(3-0-3)
A study of prominent contemporary Latino/a poets
whose work has enriched and diversified the canon
of American poetry in the last 20 years.
ENGL 40809. Constituting Americans
ENGL 40906. Gender and Culture
ENGL 40810. Caribbean Voices
ENGL 41001. Film Melodrama Lab
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the literature of Anglophone
Caribbean.
ENGL 40801. “Our America”: Exploring the
Hyphen Between African and American in
African-American
(3-0-3)
An examination of poetry and poetics by black
Americans from the beginnings to the present.
ENGL 40802. African-American Women
Writers
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the works of several AfricanAmerican women writers, including Alice Walker,
Toni Morrison, Audre Lorde, and June Jordan, specifically the relation these writers have to the larger
American culture and what they have to say about
our collective vision and future.
ENGL 40803. Women of Color
(3-0-3)
A critical examination of the literature and scholarly
writings about literature from “women of color”
across disparate cultural backgrounds.
ENGL 40806. Growing Up Latino: Narrative
and Literature
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the narratives/stories written by
Latino/a writers and what these works say about personal as well as cultural identities.
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the challenges to structuralism
represented by post-structuralism (Derrida), new
historicism (Foucault), psychoanalysis (Freud, Lacan,
Kristeva), discourses of race and gender (W.E.B.
DuBois, Audre Lorde, Luce Irigaray, Hortense Spillers, and Judith Butler) and post-colonialism (Said)
through the reading of James Joyce’s A Portrait of
the Artist as a Young Man from these various critical
perspectives.
(3-0-3)
An exploration of life writings and issues of selfrepresentation in the African-American expressive
cultural tradition from 1850 to 1905.
(3-0-3) Doppke
Throughout American history, those who took
a hand to alter nature—or raised one to preserve
it—have rarely been concerned exclusively with
the continent’s ecosystems. Rather, they saw themselves as advancing lofty ideals, such as progress or
freedom. After a general introduction to American
environmental history, this course examines how
nineteenth and twentieth century American explorers, activists and writers have understood our alterations to landscape and river, and what the stakes are
for modern environmentalists who seek to preserve
what wilderness remains.
(3-0-3) Irving
Close readings of various 20th-century AfricanAmerican literatures, with foci on how “black subjectivity” is created; the relationship between literature,
history, and cultural mythology; the dialectic of freedom and slavery in American rhetoric; the American
obsession with race; and the sexual ideology and
competing representations of domesticity.
ENGL 40902. Joyce: Introduction to Critical
Theory
ENGL 40811. Native-American Literature
(3-0-3)
This course serves as an introductory exploration of the literatures written by Native American
authors—oral literatures, transitional literatures (a
combination of oral and written expression), and
contemporary poetry and prose.
ENGL 40812. African-American Poetry and
Poetics
ENGL 40820. Writing Harlem: Race,
Renaissance, and the Modern
(5-0-3) Johnson-Roullier
A study of the historical, cultural, and political
circumstances that led to the flowering of AfricanAmerican literature in Harlem in the 1920s and
1930s.
ENGL 40830. Passing and Fictions of Race
(3-0-3)
A critical examination of how “fictions” in the artistic sense (novels, stories, and movies) have both
fostered and challenged “fictions” in the ideological
sense, that is, the lies and mystifications about race
that pervade American cultural life.
ENGL 40858. Introduction to African-American
Literature
(3-0-3) Wilson
A broad introduction to the major writings of
African Americans.
ENGL 40901. Feminist Theory
(3-0-3)
An exploration of the main literary and artistic
movements of the historical European avant-garde:
Cubism, Vorticism, Italian and Russian Futurism,
Dada, and Surrealism.
(3-0-3) Ellmann
An introduction to literary theories of gender and
culture in film, literature, and other media.
(3-3-0)
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
ENGL 41005. Irish Film and Culture Lab
(3-1-0)
Corequisite(s): ENGL 40511
ENGL 43102. Seminar: Religion and Literature
(3-0-3)
A consideration of the forms, ideas, and preoccupations of the religious imagination in literature and
of the historical relationships between religious faith
and traditions and particular literary works. The
conflicts and tensions between modern gnosticism,
in literature and ideology, and the sacramental imagination will constitute a recurring point of focus.
We will also lend special attention to the vision and
imagery of the journey and wayfarer and the conflicts and affinities between private and communal
expressions of faith.
ENGL 43103. Seminar: Imperialism and Its
Interlocutors
(3-0-3)
By canvassing the Age of Empire, this seminar examines articulations of imperialism in the late Victorian
and early Modernist British imagination and contemporaneous or subsequent responses of resistance
to it. “Imperial” writers may include Cary, Conrad,
Forster, Rider Haggard, and Kipling; “interlocutors”
may include Achebe, Naipaul, Kincaid, and Rhys.
ENGL 43201. Seminar: The Pearl Poet
(3-0-3)
Close readings of the Arthurian romance of Gawain,
Patience (the whimsical, pre-Pinnochio-and-Gepetto
paraphrase of the story of Jonah and the whale),
Cleanness (a series of homiletic reflections of great
power, beauty, grim wit, and compassionate insight
centered on varying conceptions of “purity”), and
Pearl (the elegiac dream-vision that begins with the
mourning father who has lost a young daughter, then
moves with amazing grace from the garden where
he grieves into a richly envisioned earthly paradise
where he is astonished to re-encounter his lost
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“Pearl,” who then leads him to the vision of a New
Jerusalem whose post-apocalyptic landscape is populated exclusively by throngs of beautiful maidens).
ENGL 43202. Seminar: Milton and His
Contemporaries
(3-0-3)
A close analysis of differing, and divergent, ways
of seeing and representing reality in 17th-century
Dutch painting and English poetry.
ENGL 43203. Seminar: Shakespeare and His
Contemporaries
(3-0-3)
This seminar places Shakespeare’s plays within the
vibrant world of Tudor-Stuart drama.
ENGL 43204. Seminar: Medieval Romance
(3-0-3)
An intensive analysis of medieval romance literature
both in England and on the continent, beginning
with the work of Chretien de Troyes and including Chaucer’s Troilus and Criseyde and Malory’s
Arthurian legends, focusing on the role of women in
romance narratives, the relationship of the romance
to history, modifications of and developments in the
Arthurian tradition over time, and the place of the
other (the foreign, the monstrous, the magical) in
the romance.
ENGL 43205. Seminar: American Women
Writers
(3-0-3)
This course will focus on the work of women writers
after World War II and up to the end of this past
century, with the idea of gaining an understanding
of the range of women writers in this country during
this period.
ENGL 43206. Seminar: Medieval Dream
before Freud
(3-0-3)
Close readings of selected works from the medieval
textual tradition in English where dreams hold a central place in the inscription of meaning.
ENGL 43207. Seminar: Everybody’s
Shakespeare
ENGL 43210. Seminar: Shakespeare’s
Religions
(3-0-3)
A critical analysis of religious influences and iconography in selected Shakespeare plays.
ENGL 43211. Seminar: Ideas of Justice
(3-0-3)
An examination of various ideas of justice in early
modern culture, from the trials of Socrates and Jesus
to Shakespeare and Milton.
(3-0-3)
A multifaceted analysis of modes of “belief ” in postmodern British poetry, with a particular emphasis on
how the operations of ancient Hebraic and Christian
texts come back into practice for these writers, and
why those earlier frameworks for conceptualizing
language and “saying God,” or failing to say it, seem
newly hospitable in the face of deconstructive postmodern theories about “the word.”
ENGL 43215. Seminar: Love and Society in
Renaissance Poetry
ENGL 43403. Seminar: Gender and
Modernism
(3-0-3) Hammill
How depictions of “love” in selected Renaissance
poetry reflected notions of “love” in the larger Renaissance society.
ENGL 43301. Seminar: Virtue, Sex, and the
Good Life: Eighteenth-Century Novels
(3-0-3)
The 18th-century novel deals with the questions of
social, political, sexual, and economic identities and
choices in a time of great change, and this course
examines several novels representative of the time
period.
ENGL 43302. Seminar: Jane Austen
(3-0-3)
Research in the novels of Jane Austen.
ENGL 43303. Seminar: Victorian Fiction
ENGL 43304. Seminar: Nineteenth-Century
British Novel
ENGL 43501. Seminar: James Joyce
(3-0-3) Vanden Bossche
The British novel, 1830–60, as a popular medium
through which writers explored serious concerns: E.
Bronte, Gaskell, Dickens, Collins.
ENGL 43208. Seminar: Enlightenment Drama
ENGL 43401. Seminar: Modernism and
Modernity
(3-0-3)
In this course, we will read The Canterbury Tales
from start to finish, focusing on questions of genre,
poetic voice and authority, the relationship of history
to literature, the development of character, and the
emergence of vernacular poetry in English.
ENGL 43409. Seminar: Woolf and Bloomsbury
(3-0-3) Green
An analysis of the novels, essays, art, and political
writings of some of the members of the Bloomsbury
Group—including Woolf, E.M. Forster, Roger Fry,
and Leonard Woolf—in order to explore the complex moments of cross-fertilization, critique, and
revision that define their encounters, along with notions of a “feminine” or “women’s” modernism.
ENGL 43305. Seminar: Victorian Radicals
ENGL 43209. Seminar: Chaucer
(3-0-3)
An intensive study of “feminine” or “women’s”
modernism: modernist aesthetics read in relation to
questions of race and gender; the formation of literary modernism’s often tense relation to mass culture;
the development of political and literary avant-garde
cultures (with specific emphasis on those marked by
gender and race such as the suffrage movement and
the Harlem Renaissance); the development of modern discourses of sexuality; the intimate and complex
relationship between modernism and race; and the
special attention given to women’s experiences of
modernity, especially in relation to those aspects of
culture typically excluded from definitions of the
modern (shopping, maternity, consuming popular,
sentimental fictions, etc.).
(3-0-3)
A close reading of five late-Victorian novels—Trollope’s The Eustace Diamonds, James’s Portrait of a
Lady, Hardy’s Tess of the D’urbervilles, Eliot’s Daniel
Deeronda, and Collins’s Armadale—that organize
themselves around the thoughts and deeds of “bad
girls.”
(3-0-3)
A close analysis of Shakespeare’s plays (including
tragedies, comedies, and romances), as well as a
number of contemporary “re-visions” of those works
by authors of varying cultural, ethnic, or gender
backgrounds.
(3-0-3)
A close study of drama, tragic, and comic, after
Shakespeare.
ENGL 43402. Seminar: “God” in Postmodern
British Poetry
(3-0-3)
“Fringe” characters in, and elements of, British
Victorian Literature, with a particular emphasis on
a modern world being increasingly defined in economic terms.
(3-0-3)
By engaging a wide variety of modern writers ranging from D.H. Lawrence, T.S. Eliot, Larsen, Fauset,
Barnes, Rhys, Woolf, Langston Hughes, and West, to
Lewis, Joyce, and Beckett, the changing contours of
literary modernism in the larger context of the philosophical, social, and political cultures of modernity.
(3-0-3)
Close readings and discussion of Joyce’s Dubliners, A
Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, and Ulysses.
ENGL 43502. Seminar: Contemporary Irish
Literature
(3-0-3) Harris
Irish drama, fiction, and poetry of the second half of
the 20th century.
ENGL 43503. Seminar: Ango-Irish Identities
1600–1800
(3-0-3)
Focusing on the 200-year historical period that was
crucial in the formation of “Ireland,” this course explores the complex and contested cultural, political,
and ideological identities of a group we have come to
call the Anglo-Irish, including Swift, Berkeley, Edgeworth, and Goldsmith.
ENGL 43504. Seminar: Modern Irish Fiction
(3-0-3)
A close examination of the works of major Irish writers of fiction after the Second World War—Flann
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O’Brien, Frank O’Connor, Mary Lavin, Patrick
Kavanagh, Edna O’Brien, Michael MacLaverty, Sam
Hanna Bell, and Brian Moore.
ENGL 43601. Seminar: Landscape in
American Literature
(3-0-3)
A thematic reading of “landscape” in American Literature from the Puritans to Toni Morrison.
ENGL 43701. Seminar: Southern Fiction
ENGL 43805. Seminar: Twentieth-Century
Black Women Writers
(3-0-3)
A close examination of major 20th-century AfricanAmerican women writers.
ENGL 43806. Seminar: Caribbean Voices
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the literature of the Anglophone
Caribbean.
(3-0-3)
Close readings of Southern fiction from 1900
to 1960, including Chopin, Glasgow, Toomer,
Faulkner, Wright, Ellison, Hurston, Warren, Welty,
and O’Connor.
ENGL 43810. Seminar: Latino Literature
ENGL 43702. Seminar: Suffragettes and
Literature
(3-0-3)
ENGL 20503, Northern Irish Writing and Politics
M-F 10:20–12:30, 6/19–7/10 Mary Smyth (Crosslisted with IRST 30204). This intensive course will
chart the links between politics, history, and culture
in the partitioned North of Ireland over the past 80
years or so. Both Ulster unionist and Irish nationalist ideologies will be explored through the writings
of the following Irish writers: Frank McGuinness,
Brian Friel, Sam Thompson, Seamus Deane, Seamus
Heaney, Anne Devlin, Eoin MacNamee, Ciaran
Carson, and Thomas Kinsella, among others. We
will read drama, fiction, and poetry. There will also
be a cinema element built into our survey of this
complex conflict.
(3-0-3)
A close study devoted to tracing and defining
the feminist literary cultures of the 20th century
through, first, reading the writings created during
the “First Wave” of feminist activism that defined
women’s militant and nonmilitant struggle for the
vote at the beginning of the last century, followed
by exploration of the feminist writing and thought
that followed the suffrage movement and paved the
way for discussions of Women’s Liberation in the
“Second Wave.”
ENGL 43801. Seminar: Women of Color
(3-0-3)
An examination of the literatures of “women of
color,” encompassing the linguistic, national, ethnic,
and cultural experiences and connections among
women of color in cultural diasporas around the
world, and how these women use their work to
(re)map the “margin,” recreating it as a place of connection and conversation, rather than exclusion and
otherness.
ENGL 43802. Seminar: Black Cultural Studies
(3-0-3)
A close examination of the historic, cultural, and
artistic foundations of selected Latino writers.
ENGL 46001. Directed Readings
ENGL 47999. Special Studies
(3-0-3)
Independent study under the direction of a faculty
member.
ENGL 52999. Honors Thesis
(3-0-3)
Arranged by deartment honors program advisor.
Credits for research and writing honors thesis.
(3-0-3)
This interdisciplinary course considers the conflicted
ways in which “racial” identities and differences have
been constructed throughout US culture.
Graduate Courses. Courses numbered between
50000 and 59999 are open to qualified students.
Description of these courses and of graduate work
in English is in the Graduate School Bulletin of
Information.
ENGL 43803. Seminar: American War
Literature
90013. Graduate Fiction Workshop
90032. Graduate Poetry Workshop
90091. The Writing Profession
90091. Literary Publishing
90110. English for Non-Native Speakers
90101. Introduction to Graduate Studies
90904. Philology and Weltliteratur
90232. Old English Literature
90233. History Plays of Shakespeare and
Historiography
90311. Studies in Eighteenth-Century
Literature
90304. Nineteenth-Century British Novel
90409. Modernism and Modernity
90511. Memory, Meaning, and Migration
90410. Crisis, Criticism, Cubism
90805. Latino/a Literature
90705. Twentieth-Century Poetics
(3-0-3)
Beginning with Mary Rowlandson’s captivity narrative and ending with Tim O’Brien’s The Things They
Carried, an exploration of the aesthetic, historical,
and theoretical functions and values of war writing
in the United States.
ENGL 43804. Latino Poetry
(3-0-3)
This course will focus on several prominent contemporary Latino and Latina poets—among them,
Gary Soto, Lorna Dee Cervantes, Victor Hernandez
Cruz, Martin Espada—whose work has enriched and
diversified the canon of American poetry.
92001. Practicum: Teaching Writing
90092. Practicum: Teaching Creative Writing
92003. Practicum: Preparation for the
Profession
92002. Practicum: Writing for the Profession
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film, television, and theatre
Film, Television,
and Theatre
Chair:
Peter Holland
Associate Chair and Director of Undergraduate Studies:
James M. Collins
Director of Theatre:
Kevin Dreyer
McMeel Family Chair in Shakespeare Studies
Peter Holland
The William and Helen Carey Assistant Professor in
Modern Communication:
Susan Ohmer
Director of Summer Shakespeare:
Gerald P. (Jay) Skelton
Professors:
James M. Collins; Donald Crafton; Vincent
Friedewald Jr. (visiting); Luke Gibbons (concurrent); Jill Godmilow; Peter Holland; Mark
C. Pilkinton; John Welle (concurrent)
Associate Professors:
Reginald F. Bain (emeritus); Kevin C. Dreyer;
Rev. Arthur S. Harvey, CSC (emeritus);
Frederic W. Syburg (emeritus); Pamela Wojcik
Assistant Professors:
Wendy Arons; Christine Becker (on leave fall
2005); Jessica Chalmers; Emily Phillips; Susan
Ohmer; Gerald P. (Jay) Skelton;
Christopher Sieving (visiting); William L.
Wilson (visiting)
Professional Specialists:
Richard E. Donnelly
Associate Professional Specialists:
C. Ken Cole; Theodore E. Mandell; Siiri Scott
Assistant Professional Specialists:
William Donaruma; Karen Heisler (visiting)
Instructors:
Gary Sieber (adjunct)
The Department. The Department of Film, Television, and Theatre curriculum includes study of the
arts of theatre and performance, film and video, and
television. Our goal is to provide students with intellectual and intuitive resources for analysis and production of these performing and media arts. We seek
both to encourage and inspire intellectual discipline
and curiosity as well as to discover and nurture student creativity. We offer, therefore, both a scholarly
and creative context for education of the general liberal arts student at Notre Dame as well as the individual seeking an intensive preparation for advanced
study in these fields. In an interdisciplinary spirit of
collaboration, students in this department investigate
film, television, and theatre (and occasionally other
media) as complex cultural phenomena to develop
skills in analysis, evaluation, and theory formation as
well as to engage in creative production.
Students graduating from this department have numerous postgraduate choices. Many of our graduates
seek careers in law, medicine, business, education,
public service, or other professions. Others will pursue careers in theatre, film, or television. However,
we are not a professional training program. Rather,
we seek to provide the creative and technological
tools for student scholar/artists to build a basis for
advanced study and professional careers in the arts
should they so desire. It is our hope that those whose
work and determination lead them to seek careers in
these fields will be challenged and assisted by their
liberal arts curriculum. Our courses provide tools to
understand the analytical, technical and imaginative
processes of the field, whether pursued as future
work, study, or as an enhancement of intellectual
life.
Most FTT courses fulfill the University fine arts
requirement.
For more information and up-to-date listings
of courses and FTT events, visit the Web at
www.nd.edu/~ftt.
Program of Studies. Students interested in the
major are encouraged to visit the departmental
office (230 Marie P. DeBartolo Performing Arts
Building) for information about the programs and
department faculty. You also may visit our website at
www.nd.edu/~ftt.
Step-by-step instructions for becoming a major are
available on our website. All students declaring a major first must obtain the signature of the department
chair or associate chair and a departmental faculty
advisor will be assigned, with whom the student will
consult to prepare a plan of study reflecting their
educational interests and goals. Students may elect
to major in the department as either a first or second
major in accordance with college guidelines.
Normally, students concentrate in either film, television or in theatre. At least 30 credit hours are needed
to complete the major. The film concentration requires at least one elective on an international subject
and at least three upper-level courses. The theatre
concentration offers a supplementary major requiring 24 credit hours.
(A major combining courses from different concentrations is possible with approval of the department
chair.)
The Department of Film, Television, and Theatre
participates in two international programs by crosslisting courses and sponsoring internships. For more
information, see the Bulletin descriptions for the
Dublin program and the London program.
Several courses are offered in the summer session,
including FTT 10101/20101 and 10701/20701.
See the Summer Session Bulletin for availability and
further information.
Film Concentration
30 credit hours
4 required core courses:
Basics of Film and Television
History of Film I
History of Film II
Film and Television Theory
6 electives (3 at the 40000 level and 1 international
elective)
General Electives
Introduction to Film and Video Production
Writing for Screen and Stage I and II
The Art and Science of Film Production
Film and Digital Culture
History of Documentary Film
Topics in Media Theory, History, and Research:
Film and Popular Music
International Electives (30000 and 40000 Level)
Italian National Cinema
Comedy Italian Style
French Cinema
New Iranian Cinema
Irish Cinema and Culture
Australian Cinema
Hong Kong: Action Cinema in a Global Context
Upper-Level Electives
Shakespeare and Film
Intermediate Film Production
Advanced Film Production
Advanced Digital Video Production
Sex and Gender in Cinema
Topics: Film Noir
Topics: Sound Design
Contemporary Hollywood
Postmodern Narrative
Television Studies Concentration
30 credit hours
3 required core courses:
Basics of Film and Television
History of Television
Film and Television Theory
7 electives (3 at the 40000 level)
Introduction to New Media
Principles of Mass Communication
Broadcast Journalism
History of Film II
Writing for Screen and Stage I and II
Introduction to Film and Video Production
Film and Digital Culture
Topics in Media Theory, History, and Research
Broadcasting and Cable
Sports Journalism
Entertainment and Arts Law
Media Ethics
Media and the Presidency
Advanced Digital Video Production
Contemporary Hollywood
Media Culture
Media Internships
Special Studies
Issues in Film and Media
Theatre Concentration
30 credit hours
4 required core courses:
Theatrical Production (formerly Stagecraft)
Theatre, History, and Society
Script Analysis and Dramaturgy
Performance Analysis
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film, television, and theatre
Group B
Stage and Production Management
Costume History
Scene Design and Methodology
Lighting Design and Methodology
Costume Design and Methodology
CAD for the Stage
Group C
Acting Process
Writing for Stage and Screeen I
Make-Up for the Stage
Voice and Movement
Directing Process
Writing for Stage and Screen II
Audition Seminar
Acting Shakespeare
Complementary Nature of Departmental Concentrations. There is a strong creative and scholarly
relationship in the mix of courses and activities of
the department of which students should be aware.
The concentrations offered by this department can
provide many complementary areas of creative and
technical study for students involved in film and
television production, as well as overlapping historical, theoretical and critical concerns. Similarly,
those concentrating in theatre are urged to avail
themselves of the many opportunities for production
experience and critical, cultural and theoretical studies offered by the theatre faculty.
Cocurricular Activities. The department encourages
non-majors to elect courses, participate as audience
in our extensive film and theatre series, and involve
themselves in film, television, and theatre production
as a means of informing and complementing their
liberal arts education at Notre Dame. Occasional
guest artists and lecturers are also sponsored by the
department. Information on all department-sponsored activities is available in the department office
and on the department’s website.
Course Descriptions. The following course descriptions give the number and title of each course.
Lecture hours per week, laboratory hours per week
and credits each semester are in parentheses. The
instructor’s name is also included. Many courses
require completion of prerequisite courses, early
application and/or permission prior to registration
to assure the student’s readiness to take the course
and to control numbers in the class. Students should
discuss their interests and clarify course registration
requirements with the course instructors and/or their
advisors. Virtually all courses in this department
require attendance at cinema screenings (labs), plays
and other arts events.
FTT 10101. Basics of Film and Television
(3-0-3) Magnan-Park, Sieving, Wojcik
Corequisite(s): FTT 11101
This course introduces students to the study of film
and television, with particular emphasis on narrative. Students will learn to analyze audio-visual
form, including editing, framing, mise-en-scene, and
sound. Students will consider topics in film and
television studies such as authorship, genre, stardom,
and feminism. Focusing on classical Hollywood and
American TV, the course will also introduce students
to international and/or alternative cinemas and television styles. Evening screenings are required. Serves
as prerequisite to most upper-level courses in film
and television.
FTT 10401. Introduction to the Fine Arts
(1-0-1) Martin
This one-credit, interdisciplinary seminar is designed
to introduce first-year students to some of the
University’s finest art treasures. Students will have
an opportunity to enjoy the arts at Notre Dame
from a vantage point of academic preparation, direct
personal observation and experience, and the insights
of those who work in the arts. The following is a
sample of the topics to be explored in the course: the
Mesoamerican and the Rembrandt collections in the
Snite Museum of Art, the work of the Actors From
The London Stage and the Notre Dame Film, Television and Theater Department, the art of Ivan Mestrovic as found on campus, the Dante collection in
the Rare Book Room, and a selection of on-campus
classical and jazz concerts. Preparation to enjoy these
and other topics will be built on pertinent readings,
class discussions, and short written assignments, as
well as tours, guest-led discussions, and attendance
at exhibits, plays, films, and concerts. First-year
students ONLY. Does not count toward the fine arts
requirement
FTT 10701. Introduction to Theatre
(3-0-3) Cole, Donnelly
A study of theatre viewed from three perspectives:
historical, literary, and contemporary production
practices. Through lectures, readings, and discussion,
students will study this art form and understand
its relevance to their own life as well as to other
art forms. A basic understanding of the history of
theatre and the recognition of the duties and responsibilities of the personnel involved in producing live
theatre performances will allow students to become
more objective in their own theatre experiences.
FTT 10900. Script Analysis and Dramaturgy
(3-0-3) Arons
In this course, students will learn: (1) how to read
and interpret a playscript for production (script analysis) and (2) how to read and understand a dramatic
text in terms of its historical and literary contexts
(dramaturgical analysis).
FTT 11101. Basics/Film and Television Lab
(0-2-0)
Corequisite(s): FTT 10101
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 13182. Fine Arts University Seminar
(3-0-3) Chalmers, Pilkinton
This writing-intensive course will be devoted to a
variety of different topics in film, television, new
media, and theatre depending on the individual
instructor’s interests.
FTT 20002. Stagecraft: Theory and Practice
(3-0-3) Cole
A practical introduction to techniques, processes,
and materials. The student will explore traditional
and modern stagecraft methods: carpentry, rigging,
basic scenic painting as well as basic technical drafting, design ideas, equipment use, safety, material
handling, and problem solving. Students will gain
practical experience participating on realized projects
and productions.
FTT 20009. Broadway Theatre Experience
(1-0-1)
This short course offers students the opportunity
to experience theatre at its finest. The course will
include three days and two nights in New York
City where we will see four professional productions: three Broadway shows (a musical, a comedy,
a drama) and one off-Broadway show. The trip will
include a talkback with professional theatre artists as
well as a backstage tour of a current Broadway show.
The course has a lab fee ($819/quad; $849/triple;
$879/double; $1,029/single), which includes roundtrip bus and air transportation from Notre Dame to
the Hotel Edison in Manhattan, two nights at the
hotel, best seats available for the four shows, and
the theatre talkback and backstage tour. Prior to the
tour, the class will meet to discuss the shows that
will be seen, to become familiar with theatre conventions, and to understand the structure and development of professional theatre in America. The course
will include the keeping of a journal by each student
and will culminate with a paper discussing aspects of
the plays that were seen. No prerequisite. By application only. Required field trips.
FTT 20101. Basics of Film and Television
(3-0-3 ) Magnan-Park, Sieving, Wojcik
Corequisite(s): FTT 21101
This course introduces students to the study of film
and television, with particular emphasis on narrative. Students will learn to analyze audio-visual
form, including editing, framing, mise-en-scene, and
sound. Students will consider topics in film and
television studies such as authorship, genre, stardom,
and feminism. Focusing on classical Hollywood and
American TV, the course will also introduce students
to international and/or alternative cinemas and television styles. Evening screenings are required. Serves
as prerequisite to most upper-level courses in film
and television.
FTT 20102. Basics of Film and Television
5-0-3) Collins
The goal of this course is to introduce students to
the critical analysis of visual storytelling. This summer we will be concentrating on films and television
programs that have acquired cult status. We will investigate how certain texts have gained this notoriety
by examining them as works of art and as products
of an entertainment industry. Feature titles include:
Casablanca, Run Lola Run, Goodfellas, Swingers, and
The Sopranos. This course meets the University fine
arts requirement, and it is equivalent to FTT 104/
204 and FTT 10101/20101.
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film, television, and theatre
FTT 20231. Shakespeare in Film
(3-0-3)
This course studies filmed adaptations of Shakespeare’s plays. The students will examine how contemporary directors and actors have animated the
following plays: Romeo and Juliet, Othello, Richard
III, Henry V, and Hamlet. We will view and discuss
such diverse interpretations as Leonardo DiCaprio’s
gun-toting Romeo, Natalie Wood’s singing Juliet,
and Mel Gibson’s confused and college-bound Hamlet. The artists we will study include Sir Lawrence
Olivier, Ian McKellan, Kenneth Branagh, and Orson
Welles. (Meets University fine arts and literature
requirement.)
FTT 20280. Culture, Media, and Entertainment
in China Today
(3-0-3) Noble
This course is designed to provide students with an
introduction to aspects of contemporary Chinese
culture, media, and entertainment. The class focuses
on the development of China’s media and entertainment industries, including the online industry, the
music industry, advertising, television, and the film
industry. Students will learn to critically analyze
authentic cultural products, study their cultural and
literary dimensions, and discuss how culture affects
the political and economic aspects of these industries. This class aims to be interdisciplinary and is designed to accommodate students from a large range
of academic interests, including business, marketing,
political science, economics, communication, media
studies, music, sociology, literature, film, cultural
studies, and Asian studies.
No prior knowledge of China or the Chinese language is required
FTT 20480. Introduction to New Media
(3-0-3)
The Internet, interactive computer technologies,
and unprecedented ways of performing and expressing ideas make an awareness of new media (broadly
defined) necessary. This course examines the history,
application, and social impact of these new systems.
FTT 20701. Introduction to Theatre
(3-0-3) Cole, Donnelly
A study of theatre viewed from three perspectives:
historical, literary, and contemporary production
practices. Through lectures, readings, and discussion,
students will study this art form and understand
its relevance to their own life as well as to other
art forms. A basic understanding of the history of
theatre and the recognition of the duties and responsibilities of the personnel involved in producing live
theatre performances will allow students to become
more objective in their own theatre experiences.
FTT 20702. Stage Management
(3-0-3) Dreyer
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course will explore the duties and functions
of the stage manager in both the preproduction
and production phases of the mounting of a show.
Students will learn how to produce a promptbook
and to track and block a show. They will also learn
performance etiquette and documentation of a
production.
FTT 20703. Introduction to Theatre
5-0-3) Donnelly
An introductory study of theatre viewed from three
perspectives: historical, literary, and contemporary
production practices. Students will gain a basic
understanding of live theatre performances with the
goal of becoming more objective about their own
theatre experiences. This course is equivalent to FTT
105/205 and FTT 10701/20701, and it meets the
University fine arts requirement..
FTT 20900. Script Analysis and Dramaturgy
(3-0-3 Arons
In this course, students will learn: (1) how to read
and interpret a playscript for production (script analysis) and (2) how to read and understand a dramatic
text in terms of its historical and literary contexts
(dramaturgical analysis).
FTT 21000. Irish and American Tap Dance
(1-0-1)
This course will teach a range of fundamental American tap steps in addition to at least two finished tap
dance pieces set to music. Several hard-shoe Irish tap
dances will be taught, and depending on the ability of the students, several other completed dances
are possible. The particular range of individual tap
dances learned will permit the student to use these
steps and expand them to fit a wide diversity of music types and rhythms. Although the class is intended
for students who have never learned tap previously,
both elementary and middle-range students have
found the class suited to their needs. Tap shoes are
a necessity and should be purchased before the class
begins. Does not fulfill the fine arts requirement.
FTT 21001. Acting: Process
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
The purpose of this class is self-discovery and growth
as an actor. You will be introduced to basic principles
and techniques for preparation and performance, as
well as a context for developing a working methodology for personal creative growth as an actor, the
creation of a role, realization of a scene, and an introduction to the production process. You are expected,
therefore, to know and apply these principles and
processes. Scene work is prepared and rehearsed with
a partner(s) outside of class for presentation in class.
Written textual analysis (including detailed character
study) is required for all scene work. A critical journal will reflect on assigned readings, responses to the
work, and continuing assessment of personal growth.
FTT 21005. Ballet I
(1.5-0-1.5)
Ballet I is an exploration of fundamental ballet
technique. It is an activity course that is heavily
dependent upon attendance. The course will be
geared toward those who have had little or no ballet
training, with the intention of getting the class mov-
ing quickly enough that those with some training
will find it useful. Ballet, if pursued correctly, can
be a great help to those who engage in other movement activities. While it is a stylized form, ballet
fundamentals can provide a solid foundation for
actors, athletes, and even normal pedestrians. For
example, good ballet placement is also good posture.
For the first class, dress comfortably and be ready to
move. The only monetary investment for the course
is a pair of ballet shoes, which may be purchased at
The Ballet Shop in the nearby Town and Country
Shopping Center. Does not fulfill the fine arts requirement.
FTT 21007. Writing for Screen and Stage 1
(3-0-3)
This class focuses on the basics of dramatic writing:
story, dialogue, character, and style. Students will
develop three short scenes as stage plays or as screenplays. The last section will be devoted to developing
one of these for public reading.
This class is a prerequisite for Writing for Screen
and Stage II, which will be offered during the spring
semester.
FTT 21009. Performance Workshop I
(3-2-3)
This class represents an exciting new venture for
Notre Dame theater, introducing students to the
alternative practices of performance art and performance theater. Bringing together painters, video
artists, musicians, and writers (among others),
performance has emphasized modernist and avantgarde experimentation. The work of these and other
artists are studied through readings and film and
video documentation. Students also will be asked
to use these examples as models to create a series of
their own short performance pieces. Students at all
levels and disciplines are encouraged to enroll. A
background in theater is not required—only a spirit
of collaboration and openness toward alternative uses
of character, text, space, lighting, and sound.
FTT 21101. Basics/Film and Television Lab)
(0-2-0)
Corequisite(s): FTT 20101
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 30000. National Theatre
(3-0-3)
This course provides students with insight into the
development of European theatre, from BrechtWeigel’s work at the Berliner Ensemble to the theatre
works of Giorgio Strehler at the Piccolo (Italy),
Peter Brook at the Buffes de Nord (U.K., France),
Ariane Mnouchkine at Theatre de Soleil (France),
Peter Stein at the Schaubeuhne, Pina Bausch at Tanztheater Wuppertal, and Heiner Mueller and Einar
Schleef at the Volksbuehne and the Berlin Ensemble
(Germany). Students are introduced to the main
productions of these directors, their theatrical roots,
and their influence on contemporary European theater and playwriting.
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film, television, and theatre
FTT 30003. Playwriting and Screenwriting
(3-0-3)
This is a creative-writing course workshop that deals
with the principles of dramatic construction. The
course examines consideration of character development, plot structure, dialogue, and critical analysis,
as well as and the evolution of dramatic form into
cinematic narrative. Students can choose to work in
either (or both) formats forms that is, theatre or film.
Students will develop plays or screenplays appropriate for later production within the department and
will analyze and evaluate each other’s creative work.
Screenings and play performances outside of class are
may be required.
how Australian films fashion an Australian identity.
We will discuss Australia’s complex relationship to
European and American culture, representations of
Aboriginal culture, women in the Australian cinema,
the representation of the outback vs. the city, tourism and the film industry, the role of film festivals,
and more.
FTT 30231. Comedy, Italian Style!
(3-0-3)
An introduction to Japanese classical theater (Noh,
Kyogen, Bunraku, and Kabuki) through readings
and videotapes of selected plays.
(3-0-3)
An exploration of comic traditions in Italy: the
popular film genre known as “comedy Italian style”
is analyzed in its historical development in the
1950s and ‘60s, together with Italian film comedies
from the silent period through the present. Roberto
Benigni’s new film version of Pinocchio, for example,
to be released in the United States in December of
2002, extends a long line of comic genius. The commedia dell’arte, Goldoni’s comedy of manners, and
the political farce of Nobel Prize winner Dario Fo
provide further examples of a comic tradition that
continues to be a vital force of aesthetic pleasure and
political comment. Requirements include attendance
at mandatory film screenings, participation in class
discussions, a number of short papers, and midterm
and final exams. The class will be conducted in
English.
FTT 30101. History of Film I
FTT 30232. National Cinemas
FTT 30004. Makeup for the Stage
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Theory and practice of makeup design, including basic, corrective, old-age, and special character makeup.
FTT 30008. Love, Death, Revenge: Japanese
Drama
(3-0-3) Sieving
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s): FTT 31101
This course traces the major developments within
the history of US and international cinema from its
beginnings to 1946. It will look at films from the
major cinematic movements and genres and from
major filmmakers. These films and filmmakers will
be considered in terms of the social, economic,
technological, and aesthetic forces that have shaped
them.
FTT 30102. History of Film II
(3-0-3) Magnan-Park
Prerequisite(s): FTT 30101 or FTT 310
Corequisite(s): FTT 31102
This course traces the major developments in world
cinema from the post-WWII era to the present. The
course will examine the shifting social, economic,
technological, and aesthetic conditions of this period, especially the demise of the Hollywood studio
system, the rise of new technologies and auxiliary
marketing outlets, and the globalization of cinema.
The course will not be limited to Hollywood filmmaking, but will also look at various international
movements, including Italian Neorealism, the French
New Wave, and recent Asian cinemas. Majors only
through third period, then open to all.
FTT 30230. Australian Cinema
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 31232
This course presents a survey of Australian cinema
from the silent era to the present with special attention to the new Australian cinema of the 1970s.
Students will examine these films in their social
and political context. Throughout, we will consider
(3-2-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 31232
Every industrialized country, and many non-industrialized ones, have developed distinctive national
cinemas. Often these productions are a dynamic mix
of Hollywood influences, assertive local cultures, and
government control. This course examines the films
of one or more countries to reveal their distinctive
styles, stories, and visual and narrative techniques.
(The nationality varies each year.) The idea of “nation” as a critical concept is also addressed. May be
repeated. Fulfills the University fine arts requirement
and the Film/TV international area requirement.
FTT 30233. New Iranian Cinema
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 31233
This seminar course will take up a selection of the
best of the new wave of Iranian cinema (films by
Kiarostami, Close-Up, Taste of Cherry, And Life Goes
On, Through the Olive Trees; Mahkmalbaf: Gabbeh,
the Cyclist; Samira Makhmalbaf, The Apple; Panahi,
The Circle; Naderi, The Runner; and others) and
debate its sources and its paradoxical arrival on the
international film scene. We will consider the role
of censorship, limited budgets, Islamic proscriptions, national history and aspirations, issues of
gender and, in particular, the persistent influence of
a 2,500-year old, popular Persian poetic tradition in
the inspiration and refinement of this unexpected
and celebrated cultural phenomenon.
FTT 30234. New Directions in Russian Cinema
(3-0-3)
Freed from the constraints of Soviet-era censorship,
since 1990 Russian filmmakers have exploited the
unique qualities of the film medium in order to create compelling portraits of a society in transition.
The films we will watch cover a broad spectrum:
reassessing Russia’s rich pre-Revolutionary cultural
heritage as well as traumatic periods in Soviet history (World War II, the Stalinist era); grappling
with formerly taboo social issues (gender roles, antiSemitism, alcoholism); taking an unflinching look at
new social problems resulting from the breakdown
of the Soviet system (the rise of neo-fascism, the war
in Chechnya, organized crime); and meditating on
Russia’s current political and cultural dilemmas (the
place of non-Russian ethnicities within Russia, Russians’ love-hate relationship with the West). From
this complex cinematic patchwork emerges a picture
of a new, raw Russia, as yet confused and turbulent,
but full of vitality and promise for the future. Short
readings will supplement the film component of the
course.
FTT 30235. Italian National Cinema
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): LLRO 41545
Conducted in English, this course examines the concept and reality of “national cinema” in the Italian
case. A history of one of the world’s most renowned
national cinemas focusing on the construction of
national identity in film.
FTT 30237. Nazi Past in Postwar German Film
(3-0-3)
How have German films since 1945 been trying to
deal with the Nazi past? How do Germans picture
their memories of the Third Reich? How do they
define themselves within and against their country’s
history? And how do they live with their remembrances now? Primarily, this class aims at issues in
the realm of ethics (perpetrators, victims, and passive
accomplices; stereotypes; courage and cowardice;
personal and national guilt; revisionism, comingto-terms, and productive memory; responsibility
and the [im]possibility of reconciliation). Some
central questions about German history during the
Third Reich and the postwar era will be dealt with.
The course will also develop basic categories of film
analysis and ask questions about the special capacity
of film to help a nation work through its past. Films
subtitled, dubbed, or English language. Readings,
lectures, and discussions in English.
FTT 30238. Short Story in East Asia and
Beyond
(3-0-3)
This course introduces students to short stories by
20th-century writers in China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan,
and the East Asian diasporas. The goals of the course
are to examine the intertwined modern histories of
East Asian nation-states, investigate the short story
as a literary genre, and explore critical concepts of
literary and cultural identity studies. The stories will
be read in conjunction with critical essays on nation,
gender, and the short story, with particular attention
to the narrative strategies of the authors. Reading the
stories both in terms of the cultural and ideological
contexts in which they were written and as material
artifacts available to us in English today helps to
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problematize the meanings of “Chinese,” “Japanese,”
or “Korean” in East Asia and beyond. Ultimately,
this course will provide students with the conceptual
framework and vocabulary to interrogate gender,
race, and nationality as socially constructed categories. All readings are in English; no prior knowledge
of Asia is presumed.
FTT 30239. New Asian Cinema
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s):FTT 31239
This course will introduce students to contemporary
Asian cinema. We will examine how Asian filmmakers define themselves and their (inter)national
identity through their aesthetic choices. We will
also explore the impact of globalization on regional
cinema, and the effect international audiences and
international investment have on the films that
are made. The course will focus on internationally
acclaimed films representing countries including
China, Japan, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. It will also
place these Asian films in their political, cultural,
and social context. Weekly film screening required.
All films with English subtitles. Course taught in
English. The course could fulfill the University fine
arts requirement, and satisfy the international area
requirement for Film/TV concentrators.
FTT 30240. Japanese Film and Fiction)
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
For Japan, an island nation whose feudal state
followed a policy of isolation for over 150 years
(1600–1868), the transition to modernity has been
an abrupt and complicated process. Modernization
has involved a transformation at every level of Japanese society, ranging from the political and economic
realms, to the scientific, cultural, and educational.
This course focuses on how some of Japan’s most
creative authors and film directors have responded
to debates relating to the strategies and sacrifices
involved in enacting sweeping social changes, and to
developing a modern, educated citizenry that would
include not only elite males, but women, the poor,
and ethnic or other minorities. Students will be
introduced to the concepts of authorial empathy and
tension between realism and fabrication in fiction
writing and filmic expressions; and to ways in which
gender, nationality, and other affiliations have been
constructed in the Japanese cultural imagery.
FTT 30241. China’s Underground Cinema
(3-0-3)
This class explores “underground” films produced in
Mainland China since the 1980s. Many films that
were produced illegally or banned in China have
garnered awards in prestigious international film
festivals—Cannes, Berlin, Venice, Toronto, Tribeca
(and the list runs on). How and in what ways were
the films subversive? What is the role of China as a
nation and state in the production of film today and
in the past? How do these films play to the international film festival circuit and international market?
Is commercialization realizing less government control of film and other media in China? The class will
view both feature films and documentaries, including those unavailable in the US (but all with English
subtitles). No prior knowledge of Chinese language,
culture, or history is required.
FTT 30242. African Cinema: Black Gazes/
White Camera
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): ROFR 31555
A course exploring the image of black Africa through
the lens of white cinematographers.
FTT 30405. Introduction to Film and Video
Production
(5-0-3) Mandell
An introductory course in the fundamentals of writing, shooting, editing, and lighting for narrative film
and video productions. This is a hands-on course
emphasizing creativity, aesthetic, and technical expertise. Students learn the many aspects of filmmaking while making short films of their own using the
new facilities in the Marie P. DeBartolo Performing
Arts Center. Requirements: Three short digital video
assignments, selected readings, and a final exam.
This course is equivalent to FTT 361/561 and FTT
30410/50404.
FTT 30410. Introduction to Film and Video
Production
(4-0-4) Mandell
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
An introductory course in the fundamentals of
shooting, editing, and writing for film and video
productions. This is a hands-on production course
emphasizing aesthetics, creativity, and technical
expertise. The course requires significant amounts of
shooting and editing outside class. Students produce
short video projects using digital video and Super
8mm film cameras and edit digitally on computer
workstations. The principles of three-camera studio
production are also covered.
FTT 30411. Art and Science of Filmmaking
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course is a behind-the-scenes look at the artists
and craft people who work together to create both
theatrical films and television programs. We will
explore the many roles people play and the techniques used to make movies specifically the director,
producer, and cinematographer’s relationship on a
set. This study will combine history, technology, and
the politics of both big budget shows and independent cinema. This is a course about film production
without all of the hands-on experience, which will
provide a basis for those thinking about doing production as well as expand the expertise for those who
have taken production courses. We will, however,
conduct various in-class film tests. There will be
screenings, a midterm, and final paper (10 pages) regarding a chosen researched topic about filmmaking.
Materials fee required.
FTT 30430. History of Documentary Film
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s) FTT 31430
This course will track the history of nonfiction film
and television, examining various structures and formats including expository, narrative, experimental,
formalist, docudrama, and “reality TV.” It will also
examine the uses of “actuality” footage in films that
make no pretense to objectivity. At the center of the
course will be a deconstruction of the notion of “film
truth.” Students will develop skills in the critical
analysis of documentary and examine the standards
by which we evaluate them.
FTT 30436. Topics in Media Theory, History,
and Research
(3-2-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 31436
An investigation of selected topics concerning theory,
history, and research in film, television, the media, or
cultural studies.
FTT 30437. Topics: Film and Popular Music
(3-0-3) Wojcik
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s): FTT 31437
This course examines the relationship between
popular music and film through an examination
of film scores, the genre of the musical, musical
performance, the use of prerecorded pop songs in
films, rockumentaries, music video, and pop biopics. We’ll see films using popular music of all kinds:
Tin Pan Alley, ‘50s rock ‘n roll, jazz, disco, country,
French pop, and more. We’ll consider the role of
the star—ranging from Astaire to Travolta, Dylan to
Madonna—and films by directors such as Scorsese
and Welles. Looking at films from the 1930s to the
present, we?ll consider the narrative function and
meaning of music, industrial practices, changing
social values, how songs get Academy Awards, how
soundtracks circulate, and how film relates to various other musical media, such as radio and MTV.
Throughout, we will pay special attention to how
pop music affects film?s ideologies of gender, race,
and sexuality. Students do not need a background in
music. Films will include The Band Wagon, American
Graffiti, A Man and a Woman, Saturday Night Fever,
Touch Of Evil, Truth Or Dare, The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, Round Midnight, and Nashville.
FTT 30460. Principles of Television and
Multimedia Production
(3-0-3)
This course provides a fundamental understanding
of video and multimedia program production, from
initial concept to final broadcast. The point of view
is from the perspective of the executive producer,
who oversees all business and creative aspects of television programs. All media that incorporates video,
including broadcast television, CD-ROM, DVD,
and the Internet, will be covered. Topics include
proposal development and budget; understanding
the target audience; audience exposure, attention,
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perception, and retention; production elements;
locations; the script; sponsor relations; credibility
and ethics; motivational television; and on-camera
interview techniques.
suburbia and consumerism, its impact on the political movements of the 1960s, and the ways it has
represented America’s changing ideas of race, gender,
and ethnicity.
FTT 30461. History of Television
FTT 30465. Sports and Television
(3-0-3) Ohmer
Corequisite(s): \FTT 31461
This course analyzes the history of television, spanning from its roots in radio broadcasting to the latest
developments in digital television. In assessing the
many changes across this span, the course will cover
such topics as why the American television industry
developed as a commercial medium in contrast to
most other national television industries; how television programming has both reflected and influenced
cultural ideologies through the decades; and how
historical patterns of television consumption have
shifted due to new technologies and social changes.
Through studying the historical development of
television programs and assessing the industrial,
technological, and cultural systems out of which they
emerged, the course will piece together the catalysts
responsible for shaping this highly influential medium. Majors only through third period, then open
to all.
FTT 30462. Broadcast Journalism
(3-0-3) Sieber
Four major topics are covered: (1) Writing for
broadcast with emphasis on developing the student’s
understanding of grammar and style in the construction of effective news stories; (2) newsroom
structure: understanding who does what in today’s
broadcast newsroom and how economics affects the
flow of information; (3) journalism ethics: analysis
of personal values, ethical principles, and journalistic
duties that influence newsroom decisions; and (4)
legal considerations in news gathering with special
attention paid to libel laws and invasion of privacy.
FTT 30463. Broadcasting and Cable
(3-0-3)
This course examines the history and current practices of the broadcast and cable television industry and
looks at its effect on American culture and society.
Topics of discussion include important issues in the
industry, government regulation, news, sports, and
entertainment programming strategies and practices,
ratings, and advertising. The course also offers an
introduction to basic television production through
eight production sessions at WNDU-TV.
FTT 30464. Television in American Culture
(3-0-3)
This course examines the formation of commercial
broadcast television in the United States, focusing
on the industrial, economic, technological, and
social forces that have shaped the images we see. We
will look at how American television developed in
the competitive business climate of the 1920s and
1930s, and how advertiser-supported networks came
to dominate. We then analyze the role of television
in America’s social and political life: its links to
(3-0-3) Heisler
Sports have played an integral role in the television
industry since the medium’s early days. This course
will highlight the history of sports on television and
focus on the nuts and bolts of how television sports
programming works today. The course will also
examine the impact of televised sports on our culture
as well as the ethical issues raised by the media’s coverage of sports. The course will require the completion of two exams and two medium-length research
papers.
FTT 30467. Principles of Mass Communication
(3-0-3) Friedewald
This course is designed to provide a fundamental
understanding of television, multimedia, and Webbased production, from initial concept to final
program delivery. The point of view is from the
executive producer, who oversees all business and
creative aspects of media productions. Topics include
proposal development and budgets; defining the
messages and target audiences; distribution, attention, perception and retention barriers; production
elements; locations and studios; script writing; sponsor relations; media credibility and ethics; effects on
behavior; television interview techniques; interactive
learning; distance education; and Web design and
advertising.
FTT 30491. Debate
(V-0-V)
This course will focus on research of current events
and the efficacy of proposed resolutions toward the
alleviation or reduction of societal harms. It will also
involve discussion of debate theory and technique.
Permission required. Offered spring semester only.
FTT 30801. Scene Design and Techniques for
the Stage
(3-0-3) Phillips
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This is a beginner’s course in basic scenic design
techniques and hand drafting for the stage. This
course will take the student through the process of
design from how to read a script, research, presentation, rendering, basic drafting, and if time allows,
model building. No previous experience necessary.
FTT 30802. Lighting Design and Methodology
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course serves as an introduction to the theories
and practice of lighting design for the stage. Students
will explore the design process as well as study the
practical considerations of the execution of a design.
Specific topics covered will include electricity, light,
theatrical equipment and its development, communication of the design, and the role of the designer
within the artistic infrastructure.
FTT 30803. Costume Design and Methodology
(3-0-3) Donnelly
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s): FTT 31803
This course teaches the principles of costume design
for the stage and the techniques of constructing costumes. The course will explore the use of costumes
to express character traits by analyzing play scripts.
The course will include an introduction of the basic
skills needed to construct costumes.
FTT 31001. Acting: Character
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
The second course in the acting progression, this
course expands on basic methodology and incorporates physical techniques for building a character.
Students explore psychological gestures, Laban effort
shapes, and improvisation as they develop a personal
approach to creating a role.
FTT 31002. Voice and Movement
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A course designed to help the advanced acting
student focus on kinesthetic awareness. The actor
will identify and work to remove physical and vocal
tensions that cause habituated movement and impede natural sound production. Through movement
and vocal exercises created for actors, students will
experience what “prepared readiness” for the stage
consists of, and how to meet the demands of a live
performance.
FTT 31003. Acting: Role/Contemporary
(3-0-3)
Advanced exploration of technique and methodology, focusing on problem solving in approaching roles
from the literature of the contemporary theatre.
FTT 31005. Acting: Role/Classical
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course looks at Shakespeare’s texts from the
actor’s perspective. Various techniques for unlocking
meaning and emotional content will be introduced.
Students will use the First Folio for textual analysis
and explore the fine arts in Elizabethan England to
discover the physical world of Shakespeare’s characters. The course culminates in a series of vignettes
allowing each student to create several different classical roles.
FTT 31006. Directing: Process
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course familiarizes students with the creative
components of basic play direction, including skills
such as play selection, script analysis, casting, blocking, rehearsal techniques, and collaboration with
designers. Students will read plays from various historical periods, participate in class directing exercises,
learn from guest speakers (including professional
actors, designers, and directors) and observe seasoned
directors in rehearsal. This course will culminate in
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each student auditioning, casting, and directing a
short play, documented in a production promptbook. Majors only through third period, then open
to all.
FTT 31008. Ballet II
(1.5-0-1.5)
A continuation of FTT 21005, Ballet 1. Ballet concentrated on the fundamental techniques of classical
ballet. Some previous ballet training is recommended; however FTT 21005 is not required.
FTT 31009. Collaborative Playwriting: Gender
Issues in Asian Theatre
(3-0-3)
The course introduces the student to the process of
devising a dramatic text leading to a performance
of the text through collaborative methods. The class
discourse will evolve from gender issues articulated
by Asian theatre, traditional as well as contemporary.
Through this method, the students contribute,
evaluate, and try out their ideas towards the writing
and production of a theatre creation, which shall be
performed at the end of the semester. Approach is
interdisciplinary.
FTT 31101. History of Film I Lab
(0-2-0)
Corequisite(s): FTT 30101
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 31102. History of Film II Lab
(0-2-0)
Corequisite(s): FTT 30102
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 31232. National Cinema: Irish Cinema/
Cultural Lab
0-3-0)
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 31233. New Iranian Cinema Lab
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 30233
Lab for FTT 30233.
FTT 31239. New Asian Cinema Lab
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 30239
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 31430. History/Film Documentary Lab
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s): FTT 30430
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 31436. Topics: African-American Cinema
Lab
(3-2-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 30436
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 31437. Topics: Film and Popular Music
Lab
(0-0-0)
Corequisite(s): FTT 30437
Certain films will be viewed for further discussion
in class.
FTT 31461. History of Television Lab
(0-2-0)
Corequisite(s): FTT 30461
During the lab times, certain television shows will be
viewed for further discussion in class.
FTT 31803. Costume Design/Methodology Lab
(0-2-0)
Corequisite(s):FTT 30803
Students will design costumes, learn how to construct costumes for the stage, and explore the process
of organizing the script from the costume designer’s
viewpoint.
FTT 40000. CAD for the Stage
(3-2-3)
The study of the use of the computer to design
scenery and lighting for the stage. The course will
begin at a rudimentary level of understanding of
computer-aided design and progress to 2-D and then
3-D design techniques. A basic understanding of the
Macintosh computer system is necessary, and significant computer work is required outside class.
FTT 40001. Shakespeare in Performance
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course will explore Shakespeare’s plays in performance across a wide range of history and forms. It
will include explorations of the physical spaces and
institutional organization of the theatres for which
Shakespeare wrote and the effects of the actors and
staging methods on his plays. It will look at the history of Shakespeare in performance from then until
now, including Shakespeare adapted, Shakespeare
restored, and Shakespeare reinvented. It will examine
contemporary productions on stage, film and audio.
It will involve visits to productions and workshopping scenes ourselves.
FTT 40002. Directing: Practice
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): FTT 31006 or FTT 344
Advanced independent projects in directing. Students considering this course should consult with the
instructor for departmental guidelines.
FTT 40010. Visual Communication for the
Stage
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Do I draw? Should I paint it? What about perspective? Model making? How can I make the director
see what it’s supposed to look like up there? These
are some of the questions facing every person who
wants to “visually communicate” for the stage. In
this course, we’ll be looking at the various ways and
methods of how one communicates for the stage—
we’ll explore the various forms, rendering, model
making, perspective, etc. for theatre design.
FTT 40011. Italian Theatre Workshop
2-0-2)
A full-immersion language experience for the study,
practice, production, and performance of authentic
Italian texts. Includes analytical and writing components.
FTT 40101. Film and Television Theory
(3-0-3) Collins
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s) FTT 41101
This course offers an introduction to the philosophical, aesthetic, cultural, and historical issues that inform current scholarship and production in film and
television. The focus of the course may vary from
semester to semester.
FTT 40230. Contemporary Canadian Cinema
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 41230
This course examines recent trends in both English and French Canadian cinema, focusing on
the work of such directors as Atom Egoyan, Favid
Cronenberg, Denys Arcand, and Patricia Rozema,
among others. The goal is to better understand the
challenges of producing films in a small nation and
to interrogate the idea of a “national cinema” that
represents the ideals and culture of a country. This
discussion-oriented course will feature an engaging
mix of comedies, horror films, and dramas. Students
should be advised that a number of films in this
course contain challenging sexual content.
FTT 40231. Italian Cinema: Realities of History
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): ROIT 41508
Majors only through 3rd period, then open to all.
This course explores the construction and development of the Italian cinematic realist tradition from
the silent era to the early 1970s, although its primary
focus is on the period 1934–66, which stretches
from the appearance of Blasetti’s openly fascist
“historical” reconstruction, La Vecchia Guardia, to
Pasolini’s “eccentric” exercise in Left-wing commitment, Uccellacci E Uccellini, with its mix of expressionist and hyper-realist techniques.
At the center of this period are found some of Italy’s
most highly regarded films made by directors, such
as Vittorio De Sica, Roberto Rossellini, and Luchino
Visconti, who belonged to the neorealist movement (1945–53). These filmmakers rejected escapist
cinema and tried to make films that examined the
contemporary experiences of ordinary Italians. As
well as analyzing the films in themselves, the course
examines the formal and ideological continuities and
differences between neorealist films and their silent
and fascist predecessors. In a similar way, it analyses
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neorealism’s impact on later filmmakers, such as
Federico Fellini, Pietro Germi, Pier Paolo Pasolini,
illo Pontecorvo, Dino Risi, and Francesco Rosi, who
attempted to develop new versions of cinematic realism. Finally, the course aims to locate the films in
their historical and cultural contexts and to address
theoretical issues arising from the concept of “realism.” Taught in English. Fulfills FTT international
requirements.
FTT 40232. Americanization of European
Culture
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course focuses on Americanization seen as the
result of cultural diffusion and a part of larger global
processes. This subject has been long discussed by
Western European scholars but from 1989 it has
gained a significant importance in the countries of
the former Soviet block. We will see how the issue of
Americanization of popular culture is presented by
scholars from both the West and the East. The subjects to be discussed include: fashion, popular music
(including rap, hip-hop, rock, blues, etc.), movies,
different television genres based on American models
(talk shows, quizzes, sitcoms, soap operas, realitybased shows), changes in university education, fastfood restaurants, foodways, the fashion of reading
self-help books and undergoing therapies, fitness,
corporate cultures, advertising, shopping malls, multiplexes, cartoons, American holidays (St. Valentine’s
Day, Halloween), the way the cities look, and finally,
the American influence on the contemporary European languages. Fulfills FTT major international
requirement
FTT 40234. Film and the Latin American
Imagination
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): ROSP 41555
This course considers the issue of Latin American
identity through films from various national traditions, including Cuba, Chile, Mexico, and Brazil.
Class discussions consider how shared cultural elements are represented in Latin American film and
how these representations challenge assumptions
about identity politics.
FTT 40235. Third Cinema
(3-2-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 41235
“Third Cinema” is the term for a wide, multicultural
range of films from the Third World. Their stylistic
and thematic practices differentiate them from
the Hollywood and European traditions that have
dominated world cinema. We will not study these
films merely as isolated masterpieces, but rather in
relation to their larger cultural, historical, and theoretical contexts. To this end, the course readings will
include essays concerning not only the films themselves but also the theoretical and political issues they
engage: colonialism and post-colonialism, cultural,
ethnic, racial, and sexual difference, and questions of
otherness and multiculturalism.
FTT 40237. Contemporary French Cinema
and Culture
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 41237
This course offers an introduction to contemporary
French cinema beginning with the New Wave in the
late 1950s extending to the present. We review the
major developments in French cinema over the past
40 years in the context of post-World War II French
culture. In particular, we will ask such questions as:
What is the relationship between the development
of cultural policy and a French national cinema?
How did the French New Wave define the direction
of French cinema in subsequent decades? What are
the influences of contemporary movements such as
feminism, gay rights, and identity politics on French
cinema? We will look at major auteur directors such
as Agnes Varda, Francois Truffaut, Eric Rohmer, and
Jean-Luc Godard. We will also view films by younger
directors such as Leo Carax and Claire Denis. No
previous background in French or film studies is
necessary and all films are shown in French with
English subtitles.
Requirements include a weekly screening, readings,
a midterm, a final, and a research project. Required
readings, exams, lectures, and presentations will be
in English.
This course fulfills the fine arts requirement. It
satisfies the FTT international elective requirement and it also counts as one of the three required
40000-level courses for FTT majors. Students taking
the course for credit in Romance Languages and
Literatures will be required to attend a discussion
section in French and to complete a substantial writing component in French. This course is cross-listed
with Gender Studies and Romance Languages.
FTT 40240. German Cinema/Weimar Republic
(3-0-3)
The years between 1918 and 1933 are the Golden
Age of German film. In its development from expressionism to social realism, the German cinema
produced works of great variety, many of them in
the international avant-garde. This course gives
an overview of the silent movies and sound films
made during the Weimar Republic and situate them
in their artistic, social, and political context. The
oeuvre of Fritz Lang, the greatest German director, receives special attention. Should we interpret
Lang’s disquieting visual style as a highly individual
phenomenon independent of its environment, or
can we read his obsessive themes (world conspiracies and terrorized masses, compulsive violence and
revenge, entrapment, and guilt) as a mirror image of
the historical period? Might his films, as come critics
have suggested, even illustrate how a national psyche
gets enmeshed in fascist ideology? Films subtitled,
dubbed, or in English; readings, lectures, and discussions in English.
FTT 40410. Intermediate Film Production
4-0-4) Donaruma
Prerequisite(s): FTT 30410 or FTT 361
Corequisite(s): FTT 41410
This film production course will focus on 16mm
black and white silent narrative filmmaking. We will
explore the technical use and aesthetic application
of the film camera and related equipment as well as
the development of the short film narrative script.
Students will shoot a short film lighting and composition exercise, an in-class film test, and ultimately
produce, shoot and edit one 4–6 minute, 16mm
B/W film in teams of two. The projects will be
edited digitally, but there will be NO effects, fades,
dissolves, titles, or sound. The filmmaking process
requires a lot of field work on locations and transporting heavy equipment. In addition to the projects
there will be a midterm and a few papers required.
FTT 40411. Professional Video Production
4-0-4)
Prerequisite(s): FTT 30410 or FTT 361
A course for the advanced production student
interested in the techniques and technology of the
broadcast video industry, utilizing the following
post-production software: Avid Media Composer,
Adobe After Effects, Lightwave 3D, and Digidesign
Pro Tools. Students produce projects using BetacamSP and DV video equipment while learning the
basics of non-linear editing, digital audio sweetening,
2-D compositing, and 3-D animation techniques.
FTT 40412. Advanced Film/Video Production:
Script Development
(3-0-3) Godmilow
Prerequisite(s): FTT 40410 or FTT 448A
Corequisite(s): FTT 40413
This production workshop encourages the development of short scripts (including casting, pre-production, and storyboarding) for fiction, nonfiction, or
formal film projects by pairs of students. It stresses
writing skills with an emphasis on the development
of innovations that expand the existing traditions
of and boundaries between fiction and nonfiction
practices.
FTT 40413. Advanced Film Production—
Laboratory
(3-0-3) Godmilow
Prerequisite(s): FTT 40410 or FTT 448A
Corequisite(s): FTT 40412
This lab course stresses advanced production and
editing skills on short scripted projects developed
in FTT 40412, produced collaboratively by pairs
of students, utilizing 16 mm color film technology.
Film and projects are mixed and on-lined on digital
video. Lab fee required.
FTT 40430. Film and Society
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Students will contextualize the films via a reader
packet drawing on articles from anthropology, film
studies, basic film production, and culture theory.
Course work will include research papers and the
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film, television, and theatre
production of a short visual narrative piece representing students’ conceptualizations of a theme.
FTT 40431. Sex and Gender in Cinema
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s): FTT 41431
This course analyzes representations of and theories
about sex and gender in cinema. Students will read
major texts in feminist theory, queer theory, and
masculinity studies, in order to become familiar with
important concepts and debates within the field.
Topics covered will include “the male gaze,” spectatorship, performance and stardom, camp, “reading
against the grain,” consumption, gender and genre,
race and gender, masquerade, authorship, and masculinity “in crisis.” Students will view classical Hollywood films, silent films, and avant-garde films and
videos. Evening screenings required.
FTT 40432. Topics: Sound Design
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s): FTT 41432
“Sound design” did not enter the lexicon of Hollywood production until the 1970s. Nevertheless, the
concept is useful for tracing the history of the relation of sound and images in cinema from its earliest
days. The range of this course will cover the function
of musical accompaniment in the “silent” film, focus
on the 1926–31 transition period, and end with an
examination of the development of new acoustic
technologies and concepts, such as Dolby and THX.
The course is appropriate for students who are
interested in film sound and music as historical and
critical subjects, and for those who aim to use sound
in producing films and videos.
FTT 40433. Cinema Ideologies
(3-0-3) Godmilow
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s): FTT 41433
Cinema, both in fiction and nonfiction forms, is one
of the major contributing forces to the construction
of ourselves and our perception of “others” in terms
of class, gender, and race. This course proposes to
study and dissect these constructions in films like
Malcolm X, Schindler’s List, Philadelphia, The Killing Fields, and Striptease through a close-reading
practice.
FTT 40434. Topics
(3-2-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s): FTT 41432
This is an advanced study of the use of film or television technique. Students examine group styles—such
as the Hollywood cinema or the European art cinema—or the individual styles of major film or television artists. Topics vary from semester to semester.
FTT 40435. Film and Melodrama
(3-2-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
This course concentrates on the most important
developments in American cinema and culture since
the 1960s. Beginning with the collapse of the classic
studio system at the end of the 1950s, this course
explores the profound changes that the film industry
has undergone over the decades, and investigates the
major aesthetic developments that occurred in film
and other media during the same period-pop art,
metafiction, and postmodernism.
Students survey critical moments in the development
of Hollywood and American cinema from the early
formation of the star system (c. 1910), through the
establishment and demise of the producing studios,
ending with the age of television and the multiplex.
Topics may include the effects of censorship and the
rating system, economic aspects of distribution and
exhibition, and the changing film audience.
FTT 40437. Advanced Topics in Media Theory,
History, and Research
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): FTT 30101 or FTT 310
May be repeated for credit. An advanced investigation of selected topics concerning media or cultural
studies.
FTT 40441. Contemporary Hollywood
5-0-3) Collins
This course will focus on Hollywood since 1975 and
will trace the evolution of both the mega-blockbuster
and “independent” filmmaking. The primary concern will be those directors whose work exemplifies
the diversity of current American film—Tarantino,
Lynch, Burton, Scorsese, Lee, Jarmusch. This course
is equivalent to FTT 478/578 and FTT 40435/
50530, and it meets the University fine arts
requirement.
FTT 40490. Media Ethics
(3-0-3)
This course will examine the journalistic and ethical
challenges that newsroom managers face as well as
the issues that reporters in the field must tackle on
a daily basis. Roughly half of the course will deal
with case studies of ethical dilemmas and the other
half will involve students in making choices for the
front of the mythical newspaper. Although there will
be readings from books on the topics, students will
be expected to read The New York Times, The South
Bend Tribune, and The Observer on a regular basis,
especially on the class days when the front-page decisions will be made. The stories in those newspapers
will provide the basis for those decisions We will also
consider how television deals with news on local and
network levels.
FTT 40491. Entertainment and Arts Law
(3-0-3) Wilson
Persons in various positions in the arts and entertainment communities encounter a wide range of legal
issues. Students will be introduced to the basic concepts of contract, copyright and First Amendment issues. In addition, students will examine the concepts
of rights of publicity and privacy, story ideas, receipt
of credit, and trademarks. Students are also exposed
to the inner workings of the film, television, theatre,
music, and publishing industries. It is assumed the
students have no prior experience in the study of law.
(Summers only.)
FTT 40501. Media and the Presidency
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
As the brouhaha over Howard Dean’s “yell” illustrates, media have come to play a key role in the coverage of presidential elections. This course examines
how print and broadcast media have functioned in
US elections since the way we choose a President was
first established. After a brief overview of changing
relationships between journalists and presidential
candidates in the 19th century, we will focus on
elections since the 1920s, when radio first broadcast
election updates. We will analyze how candidates
have used radio, television, and the Internet to construct images of themselves and their platforms, and
how journalists have become an active force in representing the political process. Rather than see electronic media as neutral or “objective,” we will assess
the narrative strategies and visual and verbal codes by
which media present politics to us, the voters.
FTT 40600. Advanced Topics in Theatre
Studies)
(3-0-3) Holland
Corequisite(s): FTT 41600
Advanced study in the areas of theatre history,
dramatic literature, criticism, and theory. Topics are
taught in a seminar format. May be repeated for
credit.
FTT 40630. Topics: Film/History/Controversy
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s): FTT 41432
Seniors through 1st period, juniors through 2nd
period, sophomores through 3rd period, then open
to all.
From the earliest days of feature films, filmmakers
have drawn on historical topics to tell enticing stories. At the same time, historical films have always
drawn controversy from those who wish to correct
the version of events portrayed. What is it about
filmmaking that encourages such dramatization
of historical events, and why do films often cause
controversy when historical fiction novels rarely do?
Does historical accuracy matter in film, and why?
In this class, we will examine a number of films with
historical subjects with the aim of understanding
how films “make” history and why these films have
such an effect on public debate. We will also be
studying a number of the films of director Oliver
Stone, who has repeatedly drawn criticism for his
historical films, and entered into debates with academic historians.
This will be a seminar-style class dependent on discussion and debate. Students should ensure they are
able to attend the class screenings, as library video
copies of films may be insufficient for proper study.
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film, television, and theatre
Possible screenings include: JFK, Nixon, Born on the
Fourth of July, The Birth of a Nation, Mississippi Burning, Glory, Spartacus, The Patriot, Forrest Gump, and
Braveheart.
FTT 40701. Theatre Seminar
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 41701
Preparation for advanced study of theatre. A course
of study for the semester is developed between the
student and a faculty advisor or advisors (selected
on the basis of goals established at the beginning of
the course). Students who will be taking this course
should consult with the instructor during the spring
pre-registration period in order to preliminary discuss future goals. Offered fall only. This course is
required for all senior theatre concentrators.
FTT 40702. Audition Seminar
(3-0-3) Scott
Corequisite(s): FTT 41702
Preparation for advanced study of acting. A course
of study for the semester is developed between the
student and a faculty advisor or advisors (selected
on the basis of goals established at the beginning of
the course). Students who will be taking this course
should consult with the instructor during the spring
pre-registration period in order to preliminary discuss future goals.
FTT 40900. Dramatic Literature after 1900
(3-0-3) Pilkinton
An advanced survey of theatrical literature and criticism since the beginning of the 20th century. Students will read one to two plays per week along with
selected secondary critical literature.
FTT 40901. History of Theatre before 1700
(3-0-3)
A rigorous survey of the development of theatre as
an art form from the recorded beginnings in fifthcentury BC Athens to the end of the 17th century,
including the physical theatre, dramatic literature,
production practices, cultural contexts, and theoretical foundations.
FTT 40902. History of Theatre since 1700
(3-0-3)
A rigorous survey of the development of theatre as an
art form during the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries,
including the physical theatre, dramatic literature,
production practices, cultural contexts, and theoretical foundations.
FTT 41000. French Theatre Production
(1-0-1)
Students transform into actors of the Illustre Theatre
de l’Universite de Notre Dame du Lac in a creative
collaboration that has come to be known as the
French play. We rehearse during the fall semester,
and perform the play in late January. Students from
all levels are encouraged to audition; theatrical experience is not expected.
FTT 41001. Advanced Scene Study
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): FTT 21001 or FTT 221
This course will be an in-depth look at the acting
process through a workshop study of monologues
and scenes from the masters of modern theatre. The
course begins with the plays of Chekhov and works
through the 20th century to contemporary times.
FTT 41002. Advanced Acting Techniques
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
A course intended for the serious acting student,
this advanced course uses method techniques in
scene study and monologue work to hone the skills
acquired in Character and Advanced Scene Study.
Students will be responsible for finding, rehearsing,
and performing texts from several genres. Class work
will focus on impulse and response, creating realistic
characters, and partner work. Rehearsals outside of
class are mandatory.
FTT 41003. Advanced Film/Video Script
Development
(3-0-3)
This class will introduce students to “Viewpoints,”
the movement-based acting training system developed by Anne Bogart. Viewpoints training helps to
raise an actor’s awareness of his or her body as a tool
in creating theatrical meaning through its relationship to, and use of, space, architecture, rhythm,
tempo, gesture, shape, and kinesthetic response.
During the semester we will do a series of exercised
in which actors will create their own non-script
based theatre by exploiting the expression inherent
in movement and relationship. Viewpoints training
is a stimulating, exciting, and innovative method
for expanding the actor’s range and ability. Students
must wear clothing and shoes that allow for a full
range of movement.
FTT 41004. Advanced Theatre Production
Workshop
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 41004
A workshop course in the process of theatre production, in which students learn to do a dramaturgical
analysis of a play for production as well as assume a
major production responsibility including, but not
limited to, that of performer, stage manager, assistant
stage manager, prop master, costumer, technical director, and assistant director. Does not count toward
overload. May be repeated.
FTT 41006. Produce/Perform One-Person
Shows
(1.5-0-1.5)
This half-semester course is an introduction to the
many benefits that the one-person show bestows on
the performer, especially a deepening sense of artistic
liberty and identity, and the spirit of entrepreneurship. It is also an opportunity for the actor/director
to study in minute detail “how a play works,”
including concepts like necessity of action, throughline, and clarity of narrative. Finally, it is a chance for
the actor to work on the rigorous convention of the
soliloquy/monologue, with all its unique demands.
Course includes instruction in seeking/adapting/
writing text, text analysis, warm-up techniques,
rehearsal disciplines (especially improvisation), body
awareness, and character work. Students will be
required to perform a 10-minute piece for their final
project.
FTT 41101. Film and Television Theory Lab
(0-2-0)
Corequisite(s): FTT 40101
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 41230. Contemporary Canadian Cinema
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 40230
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 41235. Third Cinema Lab
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 40235
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 41237. Contemporary French Cinema
Lab
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 40237
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 41410. Intermediate Film Production Lab
(0-0-0)
Corequisite(s): FTT 40410
This film production course will focus on 16mm
black and white silent narrative filmmaking. We will
explore the technical use and aesthetic application
of the film camera and related equipment as well as
the development of the short film narrative script.
Students will shoot a short film lighting and composition exercise, an in-class film test, and ultimately
produce, shoot, and edit one 4–6 minute, 16mm B/
W film in teams of two. The projects will be edited
entirely on film. The filmmaking process requires a
lot of field work on locations and transporting heavy
equipment. In addition to the projects there will be
a midterm and a few papers required.
FTT 41413. Advanced Film Production—
Laboratory
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 40412
Students will work in teams of two and utilize 16
mm color film processes and/or Betacam videotape
technologies. Lab fee required.
FTT 41430. Film Topics: Comedy Lab
(0-2-3)
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
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film, television, and theatre
FTT 41431. Sex and Gender in Cinema Lab
(3-0-3)
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 41432. Topics: Sound Design Lab
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 40630
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 41433. Cinema Ideologies
(0-0-0)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s): FTT 40433
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 41435. Film Melodrama Lab
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 40435
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 41600. Shakespeare and Film Lab
(0-0-0)
During the lab times, certain films will be viewed for
further discussion in class.
FTT 41601. Issues in Film and Media Lab
0-2.5-0)
Corequisite(s): FTT 43601
Lab attendance at ND Cinema, Thursdays 7:00–
9:30 p.m., is required.
FTT 41701. Theatre Seminar Lab
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): FTT 40701
Preparation for advanced study of theatre.
FTT 43601. Issues in Film and Media
(3-0-3) Crafton
Corequisite(s): FTT 41601
The purpose of this capstone course is to provide
students concentrating in film and media with a
senior seminar in which they may participate in
some of the current critical debates in advanced film,
television, and new media studies, through class
discussion and in individual projects. The topics vary
each semester, but might include the role of government control of and social influence on the media,
the effects of new global markets, concerns about
representing race and gender, and new critical and
aesthetic approaches. The course will be formatted
as the kind of seminar that one might encounter in
a graduate program, with students sitting around a
table giving oral presentations based on readings and
screenings. The class will meet in one 150-minute
session, with a short mid-session break. There will
be guest faculty visiting the class. Each student will
write a 15–20 page term paper that will be developed
over the semester in close consultation with the instructor. Lab attendance at ND Cinema, Thursdays
from 7:00–9:30 p.m., is required.
FTT 45001. Theatre Internship
(V-0-V)
Placement of advanced students with professional or
community theatre organizations. Students can take
no more than two 45001 internships for a total of
no more than six credit hours. Application deadline
is March 28.
FTT 45410. Film Production Internship
FTT 45501. Media Internship
(V-0-V)
Students who successfully complete at least two of
the following courses, FTT 30462, FTT 30410, or
FTT 30463, may be eligible for an internship at a
television station or network, radio station, video
production company, film production company or
similar media outlet.
(V-0-V)
Placement of advanced students as crew members
with local professional and educational film productions. Students can take no more than two 45410 internships for a total of no more than six credit hours.
Interns must work 10–15 hours per week and
compile 150 work hours by the end of the semester
(120 hours for the summer session) to obtain three
credits. Interns will complete a project, mid-semester
progress report and a final evaluation paper.
FTT 45430. Documentary: Critical Analysis
and Method
FTT 46600. Thesis/Undergraduate Research
(3-1-3)
We see documentaries in many different forms
every day through journalism, reality television, the
Discovery channel, and the nonfiction film. Documenting ourselves and others has become a major
component of the American discourse for education,
entertainment, and propoganda purposes. This
course turns a critical, anthropological, and methodological eye towards interpreting, constructing, and
contextualizing the docummentary. The students
will view and analyze a variety of documentary
formats as well as participate in the production of a
short video documentary. Lectures and readings will
be drawn from anthropology, culture theory, film
theory, and practice with an emphasis on elements
of production.
FTT 45460. Broadcast Internship (WNDU)
(V-0-V)
Prerequisite(s): FTT 30463 or FTT 395
Students who successfully complete FTT 30463 may
be eligible for an internship at WNDU-TV, the local
NBC affiliate, or Golden Dome Productions, a video
production company. Interns must work 10–12
hours a week and accumulate at least 150 hours during the semester. Interns also must complete a significant project, which must be approved by supervisor
and instructor, a mid-semester progress report, and a
final evaluation.
FTT 45461. Broadcast Internship (WNDU)
(V-0-V)
Students may gain academic credit by completing
an internship at the WNDU stations, which consists
of WNDU-TV and Golden Dome productions.
Interns are required to work 10–12 hours per week
and accumulate at least 150 hours of work during
the semester. Interns will enhance their skills and
knowledge about the broadcasting/video production
industry while gaining practical experience. In addition to their work schedule, interns must complete a
mid-semester progress report, a final evaluation, and
a project.
FTT 45462. Media Internship
(V-0-V)
Only by prior permission of the Programme. Application required early in the semester prior to
departure for London.
(V-0-V)
Research for the advanced student. Taken S/U only.
FTT 47001. Practicum
(V-0-V)
Individual practical projects for the advanced student. May be repeated up to six hours of credit.
Taken S/U only.
FTT 47601. Special Studies
(V-0-V)
Research for the advanced student.
FTT 50404. Introduction to Film and Video
Production
4-0-4)
An introductory course in the fundamentals of
shooting, editing, and writing for film and video
productions. This is a hands-on production course
emphasizing aesthetics, creativity, and technical
expertise. The course requires significant amounts of
shooting and editing outside class. Students produce
short video projects using digital video and Super
8mm film cameras and edit digitally on computer
workstations. The principles of three-camera studio
production are also covered.
FTT 57601. Special Studies
(V-0-V)
Special projects for the advanced student.
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german and russian languages and literatures
German and Russian
Languages and
Literatures
Chair:
David W. Gasperetti
Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, CSC, Professor of German
Language and Literature:
Mark W. Roche
Paul G. Kimball Professor of Arts and Letters:
Vittorio Hösle
Professors:
Vittorio Hösle; Randolph J. Klawiter (emeritus); Klaus Lanzinger (emeritus); Thomas G.
Marullo; Robert E. Norton (on leave); Vera B.
Profit; Konrad Schaum (emeritus)
Associate Professors:
David W. Gasperetti; Alyssa W. Gillespie;
Albert K. Wimmer
Assistant Professors:
Jan Lüder Hagens; John I. Liontas
Associate Professional Specialist:
Hannelore Weber
Visiting Assistant Professional Specialists:
Doris Jankovits; Sieglinde Poelzler-Kamatali
Program of Studies. The study of German and Russian languages and literatures provides educational
opportunities relevant to an increasingly interdependent world. The acquisition of foreign language
skills in general is an important component of liberal
education because it enhances students’ powers of
communication and serves to introduce them to
enduring cultural achievements of other peoples. In
this sense, the study of German and Russian widens
students’ intellectual horizons, stimulates the understanding of several significant cultural traditions and
allows the examination of these traditions in a more
sophisticated and cosmopolitan manner.
The goal of all levels of language courses are oral
and reading competence and linguistic and stylistic
mastery. Courses in advanced German or Russian
language, literature, culture and civilization expose
the student to a wealth of literary, cultural and
humanistic traditions as well as facilitate a better
understanding of the rich national cultures of the
German- and Russian-speaking countries.
The Department. The Department of German and
Russian Languages and Literatures offers instruction
in German and Russian at all levels of competence,
from beginning language courses at the 10000 level
to literature and civilization courses on the 30000
and 40000 levels.
THE GERMAN PROGRAM
Requirements: First Major, Supplementary Major,
and Minor
Majors must select at least one course each from
clusters A and B (in that order; see Schematic Organization of the German Program below) before
taking courses from Cluster C and should take at
least one course from Cluster C before proceeding
to courses from Cluster D. Courses from Cluster D
are intended to serve as culminating (senior-year)
courses. For first majors, at least four of these courses
must be taken at the home campus; for supplementary majors, three courses must be taken at the home
campus.
First Major
1. Successful completion of 10 courses (30 credit
hours) above the three-semester language requirement (i.e., beyond 20201).
2. Of these 10 courses, seven (7) must be taught in
German. Four (4) of the upper-division courses must
be taken at the home institution, and at least two
(2) of these courses must be at the 40000 level from
departmental offerings.
Supplementary Major
1. Successful completion of eight courses (24 credit
hours) above the three-semester language requirement (i.e., beyond 20201).
2. Of these eight courses, six (6) must be taught
in German; three (3) of the latter must be upper
division courses taken at the home institution from
departmental offerings, two (2) at the 30000 level,
and one (1) at the 40000 level.
Minor (only for non-Innsbruck students)
Minors may take any combination of courses in
Clusters A, B, and C (see Schematic Organization
of the German Program below). The culminating
course for the minor may be (but does not have to
be) from Cluster D.
Minors are expected to successfully complete five
courses (15 credit hours) at the 20201 level or above,
only one (1) of which may be taught in English.
A year of study abroad in Innsbruck, Austria, is an
incomparable opportunity to improve language skills
and strengthen cultural understanding. Majors and
supplementary majors are therefore strongly encouraged to participate in this program during their
sophomore or junior year. For further information,
see “International Study Programs” in the front section of this Bulletin.
Senior Thesis
German majors who wish to graduate with honors
may write a Senior Thesis. For those German majors
who elect to write a thesis, several requirements must
be met: (1) The student must have a GPA of 3.5 or
higher in the major, (2) the thesis must be at least
40 pages long, and (3) the thesis must be written in
German.
The student writing a thesis enrolls in GE 48499
and receives one course credit (three credit hours)
for the course. Although the thesis is graded by the
advisor (to receive honors, the thesis must receive a
grade of A), the entire department reads the thesis,
acting as an advisory body to the advisor. The thesis
is due the week after spring break, and the student is
strongly advised to begin thinking about it and start
conferring with the advisor before the October break
of the fall term.
SCHEMATIC ORGANIZATION
OF THE GERMAN PROGRAM
•CLUSTER A (Conversation/Composition/
Reading)
Prerequisite for this cluster is 20202 or the
equivalent.
30102. ABCs of Speaking, Reading, and
Writing about Literature
Offered in the fall semester in odd-numbered years.
30103. Advanced Conversation
Offered every spring semester.
30105. Stylistics and Composition
Offered in the fall semester in even-numbered years.
•CLUSTER B (Introduction to Culture and
Literature)
Prerequisite for this cluster is at least one course from
Cluster A.
30107. German Cultural History
Offered every spring semester.
30108. Survey of German-language Literature
Offered every fall semester.
•CLUSTER C (30000-Level Literature, Culture,
Linguistics, and Professional German)
A variety of courses offered as dictated by student
needs and faculty specialization.
•CLUSTER D (40000-Level Literature, Culture,
Linguistics, and Professional German)
A variety of courses offered as dictated by student
needs and faculty specialization.
THE RUSSIAN PROGRAM
Requirements for Russian Majors
Majors in Russian must complete 10 courses (30
credit hours) beyond the three-semester language
requirement, of which four must be taken at the
30000 or 40000 level from departmental offerings.
At least two of these courses must be literature in
the original Russian (40000 level). In addition, one
course may be on a Russian subject in another discipline, e.g., art, political science, or history.
Supplementary majors in Russian must complete
eight courses (24 credit hours) beyond the threesemester language requirement, of which three must
be taken at the 30000 or 40000 level from departmental offerings. As with the major, two of these
courses must be in Russian literature in the original.
In addition, one course may be on a Russian subject
in another discipline, e.g., art, political science, or
history.
Minor in Russian
The minor consists of 15 credits, or five courses, of
which at least four must be in Russian language and/
or literature at the 20000 level or above and conducted in Russian; of these four, at least one must be
150
german and russian languages and literatures
at the 40000 level. The fifth course may be a course
on Russian literature taught in English, or a course
on a Russian subject in another discipline (e.g., art,
philosophy, political science, history, theology, etc.).
Minor in Russian and East European Studies
For a minor in Russian and East European studies,
students must have (1) at least four college semesters
or the equivalent of Russian or a language spoken in
Central or Eastern Europe (German will be accepted
in certain cases); (2) four area studies courses beyond
the major, chosen from at least three departments
(students with double majors can normally count
two courses in the second major toward fulfilling
this requirement); and (3) a thesis normally written
in the senior year and directed by a faculty member
in the Russian and East European Studies program.
Students can typically attain six credits for this project, i.e., three credits for directed readings in the first
semester and three credits for writing the thesis in
the second.
Study Abroad
Our students are encouraged to experience firsthand
the excitement of being immersed in Russian culture
through participation in a study program in Russia.
Programs are available during the summer (five to
nweeks) or for an entire semester or academic year.
Credits earned for course work taken in approved
programs may be applied toward the Russian major
or minor at Notre Dame. Grants are available on
a competitive basis for summer language study
through the Office of International Studies and
through the Russian and East European Studies
program.
Writing-Intensive Courses
All 30000- and 40000-level literature courses in
German or Russian are writing intensive. Majors in
German or Russian who take upper-level literature
courses fulfill the writing-intensive requirement of
the College of Arts and Letters.
Placement and Language Requirement
At the beginning of each semester, placement tests in
German and Russian will be administered that will
allow students either to test out of one or two semesters of the language requirement or enroll in a course
commensurate with their language proficiency. The
placement test is mandatory for students who had
German or Russian in high school.
Students testing out of three semesters must complete an additional course at the 20000 level or
higher before testing out of the language requirement. This includes students who have taken an AP
or SATII exam.
Course Descriptions. The following course descriptions give the number, title, and a brief characterization of each course. Lecture or class hours per
week, laboratory or tutorial hours per week, and
credits each semester are in parentheses. Not all of
these courses are offered every year.
German
GE 10101. Beginning German I
(4-0-4) Jankovits
An introductory course of the spoken and written
language. Aims at the acquisition of basic structures,
vocabulary, and sound systems. For students with no
previous study of the language.
GE 10102. Beginning German II
(4-0-4) Poelzler, Kamatali
Continuation of an introductory course of the spoken and written language. Aims at the acquisition of
basic structures, vocabulary, and sound systems.
GE 10111. Intensive Beginning German I
(6-0-6) Weber
In this course, students will develop skills in understanding, speaking, reading, and writing German.
They will also attain a grasp of the basic structures
of the language. During class, emphasis will be
placed on using the language to communicate and
interact in a variety of situations and contexts. In
addition, there will be a comprehensive introduction
to the culture of German-speaking countries, with
a particular emphasis on Austria, as this course is
designed to prepare students with no previous study
of German to participate in the International Studies
Program in Innsbruck.
GE 10112. Intensive Beginning German II
(6-0-6)
Continuation of GE 10101 (with permission) or
10111. In this course students will develop skills
in understanding, speaking, reading, and writing
German. They will also attain a grasp of the basic
structures of the language. During class, emphasis
will be placed on using the language to communicate
and interact in a variety of situations and contexts.
In addition, there will be a comprehensive introduction to the culture of German-speaking countries,
with a particular emphasis on Austria, as this course
is designed to prepare students to participate in the
International Studies Program in Innsbruck.
GE 13186. The National Epics of England,
France, Spain, Germany, Switzerland and
North America
(3-0-3) Wimmer
In this course we will discuss and write about the
historical background, the underlying heroic, human, and religious values, and the national significance and reception of some of the greatest national
epics, including the Anglo-Saxon Beowulf (England)
in Seamus Heaney’s translation, The Song of Roland
(France) in Glynn Burgess’ translation, The Poem
of the Cid (Spain) in Ian Michael’s translation, The
Song of the Nibelungs (Germany) in Thomas Hatto’s
translation, Schiller’s Wilhelm Tell (Switzerland) in
William Mainland’s translation, Longfellow’s The
Song of Hiawatha (North America) and the Helian,
a Saxon Gospel Harmony, in G. Ronald Murphy’s
translation.
GE 20201. Intermediate German I
(3-0-3) Poelzler, Kamatali, Profit
In this course, students will build on and develop
their communicative abilities acquired in Beginning
German I and II. The four-skills approach (speaking, listening, reading, and writing) is centered on
authentic texts, recordings, videos, and other images.
The course includes grammar review, concentrated
vocabulary expansion, and intensive practice.
GE 20202. Intermediate German II
(3-0-3) Hagens
In this bridge course, students will strengthen and
refine the four linguistic skills (speaking, listening,
reading, and writing). Students will work toward
greater fluency, accuracy, and complexity of expression. They will debate, analyze, and express opinions. Materials and class discussions will center on
a cultural topic that will carry through the entire
semester.
GE 20211. Intensive Intermediate German I
(6-0-6) Weber
Comprehensive training in all language skills leading
to a balanced mastery of German. For students with
two to three years of German in high school, this
course serves as preparation for the Innsbruck International Study Program.
GE 20212. Intensive Intermediate German II
(6-0-6)
This course provides comprehensive training in
all language skills (speaking, reading, writing, and
listening). Students will read and discuss selected
cultural and literary texts with an emphasis on the
period between 1945 and the present. They will
review grammar in the context of situations and
readings, become acquainted with Austrian culture
and history, employ typical conversational strategies
and gambits, sharpen listening skills, produce various
types of written expression, and enlarge their active
and passive vocabulary. This course is designed to
prepare students with some previous study of German for the Innsbruck Foreign Studies program.
GE 30102. The ABCs of Reading and Writing
about Literature (in German)
(3-0-3) Profit
At most, two works will be read: Durrenmatt’s Der
Richter und sein Henker and Der Besuch der alten
Dame. We will read these carefully, with great attention to detail. Writing assignments will evolve from
the readings; they may include a character portrayal,
the description of an outdoor event, a short conversation, description of a crime scene, etc. They will
increase in length from a single paragraph to two or
three pages.
GE 30103. German for Conversation
(3-0-3) Poelzler, Kamatali
This is an advanced German language course, designed for students who have successfully completed
a minimum of four semesters of German. This
course expands on the grammatical structures of
the German language spoken in German-speaking
countries today, with emphasis on communication
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and acquisition of advanced language skills: reading
and listening comprehension, and oral and written
expression. A study of everyday German culture supports the language study. The conversational component of the course requires student-teacher and
student-student interaction (in large and small group
settings) to exchange information, clarify meanings,
express opinions, argue points of view, and engage in
any other communicative function for which native
speakers use language. The course includes ongoing
evaluation of students, using a variety of evaluative
instruments and communicative contexts. Note: Native speakers or students who already have achieved
a high level of oral proficiency (to be determined by
an oral proficiency interview with the instructor) will
not be given credit for this course.
GE 30105. Advanced Stylistics and
Composition
(3-0-3)
This course offers students the opportunity to increase the sophistication of their written German.
Speaking, listening, and reading skills also will
benefit. Assignments are varied widely to address
the interests and strengths of all students and to allow many opportunities for creativity. For example,
students may work at writing letters, biography or
autobiography, short stories, editorials, film reviews,
or advertisements, to name just a few of the genres
and writing styles we explore. In the process, students build their vocabulary, including idiomatic
expressions, and solidify their understanding of
German grammar. German culture, as expressed in
short texts, the Internet, films, and music, provide a
rich and meaningful context for the writing process.
Students work frequently in groups to read and edit
each other’s work.
GE 30106. The Face(s) of German Identity
(3-0-3 )
The dismantling of the border between the two German states not only changed the German landscape
but also disrupted the silence regarding concepts of
national identity in Germany. This course examines
the cultural constructions of nation and identity in
Germany, beginning with the French Revolution
and continuing to today. The subjects we examine
include essays, poetry, short stories, films, architecture, and painting, facilitating classroom discussions
on the intersecting discourses of geography, religion,
gender, ethnicity, and nationality and their influence
on German identity.
GE 30107. Kulturgeschichte
(3-0-3)
This course offers a survey of major developments in
the cultural history of Germany and Central Europe.
The course will investigate different manifestations
of German and Central European cultures, such
as literature, painting, architecture, music, and
philosophy, as well as their interrelationship and
historical contextualization. The course will provide
an overview of important cultural and historical
developments that have shaped German-speaking
Europe. The goal is to familiarize students with basic
techniques of approaching and interpreting texts and
artifacts while preparing them for a wider range of
more specialized courses. Taught in German.
GE 30108. Literatur Von Gestern und Heute
(3-0-3) Jankovits
This course acquaints students with the major periods and issues of German literature through the
examination of a significant constellation of literary
texts. Students read, discuss, and analyze selected
texts from prose, poetry, and drama and become
familiar with basic techniques of approaching and
interpreting texts that will prepare them for a wider
range of more specialized courses.
GE 30113. Business German (in German)
(3-0-3)
German business language and practices. Designed
to introduce the internationally oriented business
and German major to the language, customs, and
practices of the German business world.
GE 30215. Medieval German Literature
(3-0-3) Wimmer
This course constitutes a survey of German literature from its beginnings during Germanic times
until the 16th century. Ideas, issues, and topics are
discussed in such a way that their continuity can
be seen throughout the centuries. Lectures and
discussions are in German, but individual students’
language abilities are taken into consideration. Readings include modern German selections from major
medieval authors and works such as Hildebrandslied,
Rolandslied, Nibelungenlied, Iwein, Parzival, Tristan,
courtly lyric poetry, the German mystics, secular and
religious medieval drama, Der Ackermann aus Buhmen, and the beast epic Reineke Fuchs. Class discussions and brief presentations in German by students
on the selections are intended as an opportunity for
stimulating exchange and formal use of German.
GE 30565. German Novelle
(3-0-3)
This course will explore the German Novelle, one
of the most popular genres of 19th-century German
literature. Each work will be read and discussed with
careful attention to its formal characteristics as well
as its historical and cultural contexts. By proceeding chronologically through the literary periods of
Romanticism, Biedermeier, Poetic Realism, and
Naturalism, students will gain a sense of literary
developments in the 19th century and how these
reflect shifts within the broader culture. Among the
writers to be read: Goethe, Tieck, Kleist, Hoffmann,
Eichendorff, Stifter, Storm, Keller, and Hauptmann.
As a 30000-level course, writing will be emphasized.
Students will be required to rewrite each of their
essays.
GE 30635. National Theatre: Contemporary
Europe
(3-0-3)
This course provides students with insight into the
development of European theatre, from BrechtWeigel’s work at the Berliner Ensemble to the theatre
works of Giorgio Strehler at the Piccolo (Italy), Peter
Brook at the Buffes de Nord (UK, France), Ariane
Mnouchkine at Theatre de Soleil (France), Peter
Stein at the Schaubuehne, Pina Bausch at Tanztheater Wuppertal, and Heiner Mueller and Einar
Schleef at the Volksbuehne and the Berlin Ensemble
(Germany). Students are introduced to the main
productions of these directors, their theatrical roots,
and their influence on contemporary European theater and playwriting.
GE 30650. The Romantic Tradition
(3-0-3)
Between 1790 and 1830, the movement known as
Romanticism profoundly changed the artistic, musical, historical, religious, and political sensibilities on
the Continent and in Britain. Romanticism marked
a turn from the rational formalism of the classical
period and reawakened an interest in myth, religious
faith, the imagination, and emotional experience.
In this course we will focus principally on the German contribution to Romanticism and trace its
origins, development, and eventual decline in works
of literature, philosophy, theology, music, painting,
and architecture. Works to be studied will include
those by the writers Ludwig Tieck, Friedrich von
Hardenberg (Novalis), and Friedrich Schlegel; the
philosophers Fichte and Schelling; the theologian
Friedrich Schleiermacher; the painters Caspar David
Friedrich and some members of the Nazarene school;
the composers Franz Schubert, Felix Mendelssohn,
and Robert Schumann; and the architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel.
GE 30670. Ostalgie: The Cultural Legacies of
the GDR
(3-0-3)
Through literature, film, and news sources, this
course examines the cultural production of the German Democratic Republic. We look at how East
German cultural policies influenced literary content
and style, what forms that resistance to these policies
took, and how East German artists grappled with
Nazi Germany and the Holocaust and have now
transformed into the new unified Germany.
GE 30790. Germany and the New Millennium
(3-0-3)
This course addresses the most important political, socioeconomic, cultural, and environmental
issues currently confronting Germany, Austria, and
Switzerland. The course is designed to develop confidence in communicative skills and greater facility
in dealing with ideas in German and aims to expand
the learners’ cultural knowledge acquired in previous
German courses, with emphasis on communication
and acquisition of the advanced language skills:
genre-based reading and listening comprehension,
and oral and written expression on contemporary
topics. The conversational component of this course
will require student-teacher and student-student
interaction (in large and small group settings) to
exchange cultural information, clarify meanings,
express opinions, argue points of view, and engage
in communicative functions that language is used
for. This course will include an ongoing evaluation
of students, using a variety of evaluative instruments
and communicative contexts.
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GE 30891. Masterpieces of German Literature
(3-0-3)
A sampling of the most beautiful, moving, and humorous prose and poetry of the 20th century will be
read and interpreted. Amongst other authors, we will
focus our attention on selections from Heinrich Boll,
Wolfgang Borchert, Max Frisch, Karl Krolow, and
Rainer Maria Rilke. The written assignments will
evolve from the texts studied. Taught in German.
GE 40471. Twentieth-Century Prose and
Poetry
(3-0-3)
In order to acquaint the student with the rich diversity of characteristic of 20th-century German
literature, a wide variety of materials will be studied.
They will not only encompass various genres: the
short story, the drama, and the poem, but will also
represent various time periods: from the beginnings
of the 20th century to the ’50s. Among others, readings will include: Franz Kafka, Die Verwandlung,
Wolfgang Borchert, Draussen vor der Tür, and poems
from Rilke to Celan. An oral report, two papers,
and a two-hour final will supplement thorough and
engaging class discussions based upon close readings
of the selected texts.
GE 40484. Overcoming Political Tragedy
(3-0-3)
Fulfills literature requirement in the College of Arts
and Letters. An interdisciplinary course in drama
and peace studies. Drama is a potentially fascinating topic for peace studies because, at the heart of
traditional drama and theatre, there is conflict-and
the question of whether it can be resolved. Moreover,
just as politics is often dramatic, drama is often
political; there is, for example, an extensive tradition
of plays that make a theme of political revolution,
usually in the form of tragedy or comedy. Students
in this course read classic political dramas that are
neither tragedies nor comedies, but rather bring
potentially tragic public conflict to positive yet
nontrivial resolution. Having discussed definitions
of tragedy and comedy, and what might be the
advantages of aesthetic renditions of conflict, the
class then reads some of these dramas of political
reconciliation: Aeschylus, Oresteia/Eumenides; Shakespeare, Measure for Measure; Calderon, The Mayor of
Zalamea; Corneille, Cinna; Lessing, Nathan the Wise;
Schiller, William Tell; Kleist, The Prince of Homburg;
Brecht, The Caucasian Chalk Circle; Lan, Desire; and
Fugard, Valley Song. (We also may include selected
films, such as Meet John Doe, On the Waterfront, or
Twelve Angry Men.) We will examine these plays (and
films) through both the categories of drama analysis
and theories of conflict resolution, mediation, and
transformation, with the expectation of achieving
greater depth in our interpretations of the dramatic
texts and in our understanding of the theories of
conflict resolution. Students of peace studies and
political science who are familiar with these pieces
of world literature will have acquired a new kind of
resource for their ability to think through and work
in conflict resolution.
GE 40486. Der Artusroman/Arthurian Epic
(3-0-3)
Come and explore the enduring legend of King
Arthur and his court as interpreted by German authors of the high Middle Ages (late 12th and 13th
centuries). We spend the majority of the semester on
the three best-known and most complete Arthurian
epics in the German tradition: Erec and Iwein by
Hartmann von Aue, and Wolfram von Eschenbach’s
Parzival, as well as other later German adaptations
they influenced. These tales are among the most
imaginative and fascinating in the German canon,
full of the adventures and exploits of knights and
ladies. Our exploration of these texts focuses on their
relationship to their French and English predecessors, on the many twists and turns in story line and
character development that each individual author
creates, and on the information they suggest about
“real” life in the medieval world. We also take a look
at some of the most interesting modern literary and
film adaptations of the Arthurian legend.
GE 40490. Schiller (in German)
(3-0-3)
In this course, we will consider Friedrich Schiller as a
dramatist, poet, aesthetic philosopher, and historian.
We will read several of Friedrich Schiller’s most important plays, including Die Raüber, Kabale und Liebe, Die Verschwörung des Fiesko, Wallenstein, Maria
Stuart, and Die Braut von Messina. In addition, we
will read from his letters on beauty (Kallias), and the
essays über Anmut und Würde, über Naive und Sentimentalische Dichtung, and Die Ästhetische Erziehung
des Menschen. Finally, we will also read selections
from his historical works on the Thirty Years’ War
and on The Netherlands.
GE 40648. German Cinema in the Weimar
Republic (1918–33) (in English)
(3-0-3)
The years between 1918 and 1933 are the Golden
Age of German film. In its development from expressionism to Social realism, the German cinema
produced works of great variety, many of them in
the international avant-garde. This course gives
an overview of the silent movies and sound films
made during the Weimar Republic and situate them
in their artistic, social, and political context. The
oeuvre of Fritz Lang, the greatest German director, receives special attention. Should we interpret
Lang’s disquieting visual style as a highly individual
phenomenon independent of its environment, or
can we read his obsessive themes (world conspiracies and terrorized masses, compulsive violence and
revenge, entrapment and guilt) as a mirror image of
the historical period? Might his films, as come critics
have suggested, even illustrate how a national psyche
gets enmeshed in fascist ideology? Films subtitled,
dubbed, or in English; readings, lectures, and discussions in English.
GE 40669. Mondern Metropolis in German
Literature
(3-0-3)
If Paris was known as the capital of the 19th century,
turn-of-the-century Berlin was declared the capital
of the 20th century. The largest then German metropolis came to epitomize rapid and spectacular
modernization in Germany that started before World
War I and continued during the Weimar Republic.
Berlin had it all: gigantic industrial factories, glamorous boulevards, street lights, dazzling shop windows,
night life, movies and entertainment, armies of
white-collar employees, housing barracks, modern
architecture, shopping, traffic, crime, and social
problems.
This course offers an introduction to one of the
most dynamic periods in German cultural history
(1900–33) as it is represented in texts and films
about the big city. The discussions will focus on the
following questions: Why did the big city appear fascinating and inspiring to some authors, and to others
it loomed as a dreadful epitome of alienation and
decadence? How were modern phenomena reflected
in language and images? What were the forms of
aesthetic innovation and artistic experimentation associated with the representation of modern life? Did
men and women experience metropolitan modernity
differently?
GE 40672. The Modern German Short Story
(3-0-3)
Modern German Prose: the German short story and
other forms of prose from the “Stunde Null” in 1945
to the 1990s. Authors range from East and West
German writers of the immediate postwar era to the
most recent commentators on issues of politics, society, gender, and aesthetics.
GE 40675. Minority German Writers (in
German)
(3-0-3)
This course explores German-language literature
written by authors of non-German heritage. As a
seminar it opens up the possibilities of reading a
more diverse body of post-1945, and more specifically post-Wende, German literature. Secondary texts
will help us to understand the social and historical
context in which these authors write. The primary
reading selections will include works by authors of
African, Turkish, Sorbian, Roma, and Arab heritages.
GE 40685. Twentieth-Century German
Literature
(3-0-3)
This survey course introduces students to the major
writers in 20th-century German-language literature.
We will be reading, discussing, and writing about
poems, short stories, and dramas by authors such as
George, Hofmannsthal, Rilke, Trakl, Thomas Mann,
Kafka, Musil, Brecht, Celan, Bachmann, Frisch,
Dürrenmatt, Enzensberger, Christa Wolf, Peter
Schneider, Brinkmann, Hahn, and Königsdorf. By
also considering these writers, contexts—the trends
and movements they were part of, the activities in
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the other arts that influenced them, the contemporary discourses that surrounded them—we may
be able to add depth and nuance to our readings.
Thus, depending on student interest and ability, we
will familiarize ourselves with the larger environs of
20th-century German-language culture. Taught in
German.
GE 40855. German Drama 1750 to the
Present (in German)
(3-0-3)
We will read and discuss some of the greatest plays
in the German dramatic tradition, by authors such
as Lessing, Goethe, Schiller, Kleist, Grillparzer, Nestroy, Freitag, Hauptmann, Hofmannsthal, Brecht,
and Werfel. We will focus on the so-called “drama
of reconciliation,” a newly rediscovered genre,
where the conflict is serious but ends harmoniously.
By interpreting classic German-language plays in
the original, you will (1) learn how to approach
drama analysis, and (2) develop a sense for the
history of drama throughout the past 250 years.
In addition, we will study a few short, and often
English-language, texts in the theory of drama (Aristotle, Schelling, Carriere, and Cavell, as well as the
department’s own Hösle and Roche), which will (3)
allow you to differentiate between the basic genres
of drama (tragedy, comedy, and drama of reconciliation), and (4) better understand the nature of conflict and reconciliation. Students interested in other
national literatures will have the opportunity to draw
comparisons with plays by authors such as Aeschylus, Sophocles, Shakespeare, Calderon, Corneille,
Racine, and Ibsen; and those interested in film may
branch out into analyzing works by directors such
as Hitchcock, Renoir, Ford, Capra, Curtiz, Hawks,
Chaplin, and Kurosawa.
GE 40889. Literature and Religion
(3-0-3)
Literature, according to Martin Walser, descends just
as irrefutably from religion as human beings do from
the apes. Indeed, there is no denying that even during aesthetic modernism, literature, art, and religion
are closely intertwined. When art achieved autonomous status in the second half of the 18th century, it
did, to be sure, shed its subservient function relative
to religion, yet in terms of its topics, themes, and,
most particularly, its claim to interpret and give
meaning to human existence literature remained tied
to religion, in fact became its great rival.
This seminar will examine several stations of this
development. Beginning with church hymns during
the Renaissance and Barock, we will see how the
Bible was discovered as a literary text in the 18th
century. At the end of the century, art is conceived as
an autonomous, even holy artifact. Poetry, for some,
even becomes the medium of human self-definition
and the place in which new myths are created. In the
Romantic period art and religion become fused into
a single unity. A century later, art and religion again
come into close contact in lyric poetry of the fin-desiecle. The seminar concludes with a consideration of
the psalm form in 20th-century poetry. Readings will
include works by Luther, Paul Gerhardt, Klopstock,
Hölderlin, Wackenroder, Stefan George, Rilke, Trakl,
Brecht, Celan, and Bachmann.
GE 40891. Evil and the Lie (English and
German)
(3-0-3)
In an attempt to define the nature of evil and its
relation to such phenomena as lying and the preservation of a self-image, this seminar will carefully analyze works spanning the years 1890–1972. Among
them will be Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray;
Gide, The Immoralist; and Frisch, Andorra. Further
courses acceptable for comparative literature majors
will be found listed by the Department of English.
Consultation of program director is required.
GE 40911. Self-Definition and Quest for
Happiness in Continental and American Prose
of the Twentieth Century
(3-0-3)
Everyone from the ancients to the most technologically conscious CEOs tell us that those who succeed
know the difference between the important and the
unimportant and they allocate their time accordingly. But how does one make these choices? If, in
fact, success and happiness are synonymous, as some
would claim, which way lies success, lies happiness?
And what are the guideposts? What really matters?
In an age such as ours, does anything have lasting
value? Do I really matter? If I am most assuredly
defined by my beliefs and my deeds, what then do I
believe, what do I do? In the final analysis, who am
I? If literature, as so many maintain, not only mirrors but also foretells world events, how have several
20th-century authors representing diverse national
traditions formulated the answers to these seminal
questions? Readings will include F. Scott Fitzgerald,
The Great Gatsby; Albert Camus, The Stranger; and
Max Frisch, Homo Faber.
GE 40988. Plato before The Republic
(3-0-3)
Plato is the philosopher most difficult to interpret.
The range of his interests, the innovative nature and
the complexity of his thought, finally the fact that he
does not speak in first person adds to the difficulty.
After a general introduction into the main problems
and positions of Plato scholarship today, we will
read some of his dialogues written before his most
important work, The Republic, dealing with as various topics as virtues, the nature of art, the relation
of ethics and religion, the politics of Athens, and
the essence of knowledge. We will analyze both his
arguments and the literary devices by which he communicates them and partly withholds and alludes of
further ideas.
GE 40989. Philosophical Dialogues
(3-0-3)
Philosophy is communicated in different literary
genres, as essays, treatises, didactic poems, the choice
of which influences in a subtle manner the contents
exposed. One of the most interesting literary genres
used by philosophers is certainly the dialogue, since
it allows to hide the author’s mind behind a variety
of different positions which get the chance to articulate themselves and since it shows the connection
between philosophical ideas and discursive behavior.
We shall read different texts ranging from Plato to
Feyerabend to see how different philosophers have
exploited the possibilities of this genre.
GE 43439. Goethe on His Life and on His
Discovery of Italy
(3-0-3) Hösle
Goethe is doubtless the greatest German poet. He
was the last Renaissance man—a philosophical
mind, a scientist, and a statesman, who has written
some of the most sublime German literature in all
three genres. But one of his greatest artworks was his
own life. We will read his autobiography Dichtung
und Warheit, which gives us a splendid overview of
Germany’s intellectually most prolific time, and his
Italienische Reise, one of the most intense experiences of the essence of Italian culture ever. One of
the focuses of the seminar will be on the literary
transformation of biographical facts peculiar to all
autobiographies, and to Goethe’s in particular.
GE 43483. Seminar on German Women
Writers (in German)
(3-0-3)
Participants in this seminar will explore the rich literary history of female writers from German-speaking
Europe. We read works of many genres (drama,
short story, novella, novel, letter) by women from
the early Middle Ages to the present. In the process,
we encounter Europe’s first playwright, one of the
21st-century’s brightest young literary stars, and an
array of intriguing women who lived in the interim.
We scrutinize and apply various theoretical and critical approaches to women’s literature, both in writing
and in lively debates.
GE 43499. German Literature Senior Seminar
(3-0-3)
Seminar devoted to the intensive study of selected
works, periods, and genres of German literature.
GE 47498. Special Studies I and II
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): Senior standing, dean’s list.
GE 48439. Goethe’s Lives
(3-0-3)
Goethe is doubtless the greatest German poet. He
was the last Renaissance man—a philosophical
mind, a scientist, and a statements, who wrote some
of the most sublime German literature in all three
genres. But one of his greatest artworks was his own
life. We will read his autobiography, Dichtung und
Warheit, which gives us a splendid overview of Germany’s intellectually most prolific time, and his Italienische Reise, one of the most intense experiences of
the essence of Italian culture ever. One of the focuses
of the seminar will be on the literary transformation
of biographical facts peculiar to all autobiographies,
and to Goethe’s in particular.
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GE 48499. Senior Thesis
(3-0-3)
German majors who wish to graduate with honors
may write a senior thesis. For those German majors
who elect to write a thesis, several requirements must
be met: (1) The student must have a GPA of 3.5 or
higher in the major, (2) the thesis must be at least
30 pages long, and (3) the thesis must be written in
German.
The student writing a thesis enrolls in GE 48499
and receives one course credit (three credit hours)
for the course. Although the thesis is graded by the
advisor (to receive honors, the thesis must receive a
grade of B+ or higher), the entire department reads
the thesis, acting as an advisory body to the advisor.
The thesis is due the week after spring break, and the
student is strongly advised to begin thinking about
it and start conferring with the advisor before the
October break of the fall term.
Russian
RU 10101. Beginning Russian I
(4-0-4) Marullo
No prerequisite. Develops students’ skills in listening, speaking, reading, and writing while also fostering an appreciation for Russian culture. Emphasis is
placed on the acquisition of basic structures, vocabulary, and sound systems. Students will be encouraged
to use their language skills to communicate and
interact in a variety of situations and contexts.
RU 10102. Beginning Russian II
(4-0-4)
Continuation of Beginning Russian I. Develops
students’ skills in listening, speaking, reading, and
writing while also fostering an appreciation for Russian culture. Emphasis is placed on the acquisition
of basic structures, vocabulary, and sound systems.
Students will be encouraged to use their language
skills to communicate and interact in a variety of
situations and contexts.
RU 13186. Literature University Seminar (in
English)
(3-0-3) Gillespie
First-year students only. This course introduces
students to Russian literature and culture while also
serving as an introduction to the seminar method
of instruction. The course is writing-intensive, with
emphasis given to improving students’ writing skills
through the careful analysis of specific texts.
RU 20101. Intermediate Russian I
(3-0-3) Gasperetti
This is the first half of a two-semester review of
Russian grammar designed to facilitate a near-native
proficiency with the form and function of Russian
nouns, verbs, and adjectives. Exceptional forms are
stressed, and reading selections on contemporary
Russian life and excerpts from literature are employed to improve comprehension and build conversational and writing skills.
RU 20102. Intermediate Russian II
(3-0-3) Gasperetti
This is the second half of a two-semester review of
Russian grammar designed to facilitate a near-native
proficiency with the form and function of Russian
nouns, verbs, and adjectives. Exceptional forms are
stressed, and reading selections on contemporary
Russian life and excerpts from literature are employed to improve comprehension and build conversational and writing skills.
RU 30101. The Literature of Imperial Russia I
(in English)
(3-0-3)
The first part of a two-semester survey of long and
short fiction focusing on the rise of realism in Russia.
Topics to be included are the content and method
of realism (“gentry,” “urban,” “classical,” “romantic,”
“empirical,” and “psychological”); the evolution of
the “family” chronicle; the nature and development
of the Russian hero and heroine, particularly the
“superfluous man,” “the philosophical rebel,” the
“man-god,” and the “moral monster”; the interplay
of “patriarchal,” “matriarchal,” and “messianic”
voices; the dynamics of the Russian soul and soil; the
interaction of lord and peasant; the premonition of
catastrophe and Apocalypse; and finally, the conflict
between city and country, “old” and “new,” Russia
and the West. Daily readings and discussions. Several
papers, projects, and exams.
RU 30102. The Literature of Imperial Russia II
(in English)
(3-0-3)
The second part of a two-semester survey of long
and short fiction focusing on the rise of realism in
Russia. Topics to be included are the content and
method of realism (“gentry,” “urban,” “classical,”
“romantic,” “empirical,” and “psychological”); the
evolution of the “family” chronicle; the nature and
development of the Russian hero and heroine, particularly the “superfluous man,” “the philosophical
rebel,” the “man-god,” and the “moral monster”; the
interplay of “patriarchal,” “matriarchal,” and “messianic” voices; the dynamics of the Russian soul and
soil; the interaction of lord and peasant; the premonition of catastrophe and Apocalypse; and finally, the
conflict between city and country, “old” and “new,”
Russia and the West. Daily readings and discussions.
Several papers, projects, and exams.
RU 30103. Literature of the Russian
Revolution (taught in English)
(3-0-3) Marullo
“Literature of the Russian Revolution (in English)”
focuses on the national written expression that attended the explosion in the arts in Russia in the first
thirty years of this century, e.g., Stravinsky in music,
Diaghilev in ballet, and Benois, Goncharova, Chagall, and Larionov in art.
Readings include the “decadence” of Ivan Bunin,
Leonid Andreev, and Feodor Sollogub; the “proletarian” writings of Maxim Gorky; the “symbolism” of
Andrei Bely and Alexander Blok; and the “modernism” of Mikhail Kuzmin, Evgeny Zamiatin, Vladimir
Maiakovsky, Isaac Babel, and Boris Pilniak. (Bunin
was the first Russian writer to be awarded the Nobel
Prize in literature; Zamiatin’s novel, We, was the
model for the antiutopian fiction of Orwell and
Huxley; Bely is the Russian James Joyce).
Topics to be considered are the content and method
of Russian “decadence,” “symbolism,” and “modernism”; the “lost” man and woman in the early twentieth century; the conflict between city and country,
“old” and “new,” Russia and the West; the dynamics
of revolution, catastrophe, and apocalypse; the
nature of “imprisonment,” “liberation,” and “exile”
(physical, social, spiritual, and aesthetic); the interplay of “patriarchal,” “maternal,” and “messianic”
voices; the form and function of antiutopian themes,
psychological investigation, and the grotesque; the
yearning for “ancient” Russia and the dismay at the
new Soviet state; links to “modern” Russian painting,
music, and ballet; and, the critique of modernity and
its implications for humankind.
Daily readings and discussions; several small papers,
projects, and exams.
The course is designed to sharpen students’ aesthetic
and analytical capabilities, improve their reading
comprehension, and strengthen their written and
oral skills.
RU 30104. Twentieth-Century Russian
Literature II (in English)
(3-0-3)
The second half of a year-long survey of 20thcentury Russian literature, this course focuses on
literature as protest against Soviet totalitarianism and
as an assertion of the freedom and dignity of the individual in the face of challenges from the state and
from “modern life.”
RU 30201. Dostoevsky (in English)
(3-0-3)
No prerequisite. Dostoevsky in English is an intensive, in-depth survey of the major long and
short fiction of one of the world’s greatest and most
provocative writers. Readings include: The House of
the Dead (1862); The Notes from the Underground
(1864); Crime and Punishment (1866); and The
Brothers Karamazov (1879–80). Topics to be discussed: the evolution of the Dostoevskian hero and
heroine within the context of the writer’s fiction, as
well as within the social and literary polemics of the
age; the content and method of both “urban” and
“psychological” realism; the interplay of “patriarchal,” “matriarchal,” and “messianic” voices; the dynamics of Russian soul and soil; the conflict between
city and country, “old” and “new,” Russia and the
West; the influence of the “saint’s tale,” the “family
chronicle,” the “detective story,” and the genres of
journalism and drama on Dostoevsky’s writing; and
the writer’s political, theological, and epistemological
visions, in particular, his distrust of behavior (i.e.,
co-dependency, sadomasochism, sexual perversion,
and the like); and his endorsement of so-called “Pauline mysticism.” The first three weeks of the course
will focus on Dostoevsky’s early fiction, the thesis
being that many of the ideas, images, and themes
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german and russian languages and literatures
of the writer’s major novels were rooted in the early
experiments of both his “Petersburg” and “Siberian”
periods. Daily readings and discussions. Several small
papers, projects, and exams.
RU 30202. Tolstoy (in English)
(3-0-3)
Tolstoy in English is an intensive, in-depth survey of
the major long and short fiction of one of the world’s
greatest and most provocative writers. Readings
include: Childhood, Boyhood, Youth (1852–57), The
Sevastopol Tales (1855–56), The Cossacks (1863), War
and Peace (1865–69), Anna Karenina (1875–77),
The Death of Ivan Ilyich (1886), The Kreutzer Sonata
(1889), Master and Man (1895), Father Sergius
(1898), and Hadji Murad (1904).
Topics to be discussed: the evolution of the Tolstoyan hero and heroine within the context of the
writer’s fiction, as well as with the social and literary
polemics of the age; the interplay of “patriarchal,”
“matriarchal,” and “messianic” voices; the dynamics
of Russian soul and soil; the conflict between city
and country, “old” and “new,” Russia and the West;
and the writer’s political, theological, and epistemological visions, in particular, his theory of history, his
defense of the family, his endorsement of “rational
egoism,” his distrust of socially inspired “great men”
in life.
RU 30501. Holy Fools in Christian Tradition (in
English)
(3-0-3)
Through the analysis of a variety of texts ranging
from the New Testament to hagiographies and philosophical treatises we will examine different forms of
holy foolishness in spiritual and cultural traditions of
Eastern and Western Christianity and establish their
cultural bearings. Concepts under discussion will
include asceticism; sanctity; heresy; canonization;
hagiography. Among the course readings will be the
First Epistle of the Apostle Paul to the Corinthians;
early Christian Paterika; individual vitae of Byzantine holy fools (St. Simeon of Emessa, St. Andrew
of Constantinople); controversial lives of Christian
saints (Life of Alexis the Man of God); lives of Eastern Orthodox saints (Kiev Cave Monks; St. Basil the
Fool of Moscow); Lives of Western Christian Saints
(St. Francis of Assisi); and later elaborations on the
subject of folly found in such works as In Praise of
Folly by Erasmus of Rotterdam and Madness and
Civilization by Michel Foucault.
RU 33301. Brothers Karamazov (in English)
(3-0-3) Gasperetti
No prerequisite. This course is a multifaceted investigation into the philosophical, political, psychological, religious, and literary determinants of Fyodor
Dostoevsky’s longest and most complex novel, The
Brothers Karamazov. Emphasis is placed on daily,
in-depth discussions based on a close reading of the
text. Additional assignments illuminate a variety
of themes in the novel, from the author’s visionary
political predictions and rejection of West European
materialism to his critique of rationalism and insistence on the link between faith and morality.
RU 33401. Russian Women Memoirists (in
English)
(3-0-3)
Throughout the history of Russian literature, the
genres of autobiography, memoir, and diary have
provided a venue for women to find their voices in
a private arena safely distanced from the privileged
genres of novels and lyric poetry. This course examines the history and development of the female
memoir in Russian literature, from the 18th-century
memoirs of a courtier of Catherine the Great to documents of the Stalinist terror and prison camp life
of the 20th century. We also will address theoretical
questions about women’s autobiographical writing
and consider the relationship of the works we read to
the dominant “male” literary tradition.
RU 33450. Progress, Prosperity, (In)Justice:
The Plight of the Individual in NineteenthCentury Literature
(3-0-3) Gasperetti
Analyzes a seminal transition in Western society as
it moved from an agrarian world centered around
the rural estate to an urban culture built on industry
and commerce. Literary texts emphasize the physical, psychological, and moral consequences to the
individual of the decline of the estate, the rise of
capitalism, the nontraditional nature of life and work
in the city, various challenges to the established order
(socialism, anarchism), and changing notions of
gender. Texts include Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe;
Nikolai Gogol, “The Overcoat”; Eugene Sue, The
Mysteries of Paris (excerpts); Leo Tolstoy, Childhood;
Charles Dickens, Hard Times; Horatio Alger, Ragged
Dick; Emile Zola, Germinal, and Henrik Ibsen, A
Doll’s House. Nonliterary texts used to support the
literary depiction of the era include John Locke,
“Of Property,” Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations
(excerpts); Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, The
Communist Manifesto; and Henry Mayhew, London
Labour and the London Poor (excerpts).
RU 33520. New Directions in Russian Cinema
(3-0-3)
No prerequisite. Freed from the constraints of
Soviet-era censorship, since 1990 Russian filmmakers have exploited the unique qualities of the film
medium in order to create compelling portraits
of a society in transition. The films we will watch
cover a broad spectrum: reassessing Russia’s rich preRevolutionary cultural heritage as well as traumatic
periods in Soviet history (World War II, the Stalinist
era); grappling with formerly taboo social issues
(gender roles, anti-Semitism, alcoholism); taking an
unflinching look at new social problems resulting
from the breakdown of the Soviet system (the rise of
neo-fascism, the war in Chechnya, organized crime);
and meditating on Russia’s current political and cultural dilemmas (the place of non-Russian ethnicities
within Russia, Russians’ love-hate relationship with
the West). From this complex cinematic patchwork
emerges a picture of a new, raw Russia, as yet confused and turbulent, but full of vitality and promise
for the future. Short readings supplement the film
component of the course.
RU 40101. Advanced Russian I
(3-0-3)
This year-long course is designed to significantly
improve students’ comprehension and selfexpression skills in Russian, serving as a preparation
for Russian literature courses in the original. The
course will include an intensive review of Russian
grammar; Russian stylistics, syntax, and grammar
at the advanced level; reading and analysis of a wide
range of 19th-century Russian literary texts; writing
essays in Russian; and extensive work on vocabulary
building and advanced conversation skills. The
course will be conducted in Russian.
RU 40102. Advanced Russian II (in Russian)
(3-0-3)
This year-long course is designed to significantly
improve students’ comprehension and self-expression skills in Russian, serving as a preparation for
Russian literature courses in the original. The course
will include an intensive review of Russian grammar;
Russian stylistics, syntax, and grammer at the advanced level; reading and analysis of a wide range of
19th-century literary texts (including fiction, poetry,
interviews, songs, and newspaper materials); writing
essays in Russian; and extensive work on vocabulary
building and advanced conversation skills.
RU 43101. Nineteenth-Century Russian
Literature Survey (in Russian)
(3-0-3)
Introduces the major movements and authors of the
19th century. Special attention is given to the genesis
of the modern tradition of Russian literature in the
first half of the century and to the role literary culture played in the political and social ferment of the
era. Readings, discussions, and written assignments
are in Russian and English.
RU 43102. Twentieth-Century Russian
Literature Survey (in Russian)
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): RU 20102 or RU 202
This course surveys the generic richness, stylistic
innovation, and political intrusion into literature
that defined Russian literary culture in the first
six decades of the 20th century. It introduces such
movements/periods as Symbolism, Acmeism, Futurism, the “fellow travelers,” socialist realism, and the
“thaw.” Readings, discussions, and written assignments are in Russian and English.
RU 43208. Chekhov (in Russian)
(3-0-3)
This course is an introduction to the short stories
and plays of Anton Chekhov, with attention to the
development of his art of characterization, dialogue,
plot construction, and innovative dramatic technique. Central themes of the course will be alienation and banality in Chekhov’s works, Chekhov’s
attitude to science and progress, and his views on the
future of Russia. A portion of the semester will be
largely devoted to the reading and performance (in
Russian) of one of Chekhov’s plays.
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RU 43405. Russian Romanticism (in Russian)
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): RU 20102 or RU 202
This course introduces students to the literature of
Russian Romanticism, which came into being at
the turn of the 19th century, dominated Russian
literature in the 1820s and was still influential well
into the latter part of the century. Inspired by Russian writers’ encounters with English, German, and
French Romantic literature, Russian Romanticism
was, paradoxically, the first literary movement in
Russia that sought to develop a definitively national,
uniquely Russian literature and literary language.
We will explore this quest for a national literature in
light of Russian Romanticism’s Western influences.
In so doing, we will study works of poetry, fiction,
drama, and literary criticism by a diverse group of
Romantic writers including Vasily Zhukovsky, Alexander Pushkin, Nikolai Gogol, Mikhail Lermontov,
Karolina Pavlova, Fedor Tiutchev, Afanasy Fet, and
others. Themes of the course will include the national and the exotic, the natural and the supernatural,
rebellion and social alienation, violence, and passion.
RU 43420. Post-Soviet Literature and Culture
(3-0-3)
In the last two decades, Russia has undergone dramatic changes ranging from the crisis of the totalitarian system and disintegration of the Soviet empire
to the rapid development of new trends in literature
and culture. We will survey these new trends, with
a focus on defining the nature and multiplicity of
“post-Soviet” cultural sensibilities in recent Russian
short fiction, essays, poetry, lyrics, and interviews, as
well as in pop-culture and film. Topics under consideration will include traditional and new, post-Soviet
and postmodern, as well as feminist, emigre, and
post-colonial discourses.
RU 43501. St. Petersburg as Russian Cultural
Icon (in Russian)
(3-0-3)
In the last two decades, Russia has undergone dramatic changes ranging from the crisis of the totalitarian system and disintegration of the Soviet empire
to the rapid development of new trends in literature
and culture. We will survey these new trends, with
a focus on defining the nature and multiplicity of
“post-Soviet” cultural sensibilities in recent Russian
short fiction, essays, poetry, lyrics, and interviews, as
well as in pop-culture and film. Topics under consideration will include traditional and new, post-Soviet
and postmodern, as well as feminist, emigre, and
post-colonial discourses.
RU 46101. Special Studies
(3-0-3)
Directed reading course.
RU 47101. Area Studies
(3-0-3)
Fall semester research in Russian and East European
area studies. By the end of the semester, the student
will be expected to produce an annotated bibliography of sources, a thesis statement, and an outline/
proposal for the research project as a whole.
History
Chair:
John T. McGreevy
Director of Graduate Studies:
Olivia Remie Constable
Director of Undergraduate Studies:
Daniel A. Graff
Andrew V. Tackes Professor of History:
John H. Van Engen
Andrew V. Tackes Professor of History:
Thomas P. Slaughter
Francis A. McAnaney Professor of History:
George M. Marsden
Carl E. Koch Assistant Professor of History:
Emily Osborn
Rev. John J. Cavanaugh, CSC, Professor of
Humanities:
James Turner
Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, CSC, College of
Artts and Letters Chair:
Sabine G. MacCormack
Robert M. Conway Director of the Medieval Institute:
Thomas Noble
John M. Regan Jr. Director of the Joan B. Kroc Institute
for International Peace Studies:
R. Scott Appleby
Professors:
R. Scott Appleby (on leave spring 2006); Doris
Bergen (Warsaw, spring 2006); Rev. Thomas
Blantz, CSC; Olivia Remie Constable; Christopher S. Hamlin (on leave 2005–06);
Thomas A. Kselman; Sabine G. MacCormack
(joint with Classics), (on leave fall 2005);
George S. Marsden; John T. McGreevy; Dian
H. Murray; Thomas Noble (on leave 2005–
06); Thomas P. Slaughter; James Smyth; James
Turner; John H. Van Engen (on leave spring
2006); J. Robert Wegs
Professors Emeritus:
Robert E. Burns; Michael Crowe (concurrent); Vincent P. De Santis; Jay P. Dolan; J.
Philip Gleason; Rev. Robert L. Kerby; Walter
Nugent; Rev. Marvin R. O’Connell; Andrzej
Walicki
Associate Professors:
Ted Beatty; Gail Bederman; Paul Cobb;
Brad Gregory (on leave 2005–06); Semion
Lyandres; Rev. Wilson D. Miscamble, CSC;
Richard Pierce; Linda Przybyszewski; Rev.
Robert Sullivan; Julia Adeney Thomas (on
leave fall 2005)
Assistant Professors:
Jon Coleman; Asher Kaufman; Margaret
Meserve; Emily Osborn (on leave 2005–06);
Marc Rodriguez
Professional Specialist
and Concurrent Associate Professor:
D’Arcy Jonathan Boulton (Angers, 2005–06)
Assistant Professional Specialist:
Daniel A. Graff
Concurrent Faculty:
Heidi Ardizzone (American Studies); Keith
R. Bradley (Classics); Steven Brady (First
Year of Studies); Kathleen Sprows Cummings
(Cushwa Center); Robert Goulding (Program
of Liberal Studies); Lionel Jensen (East Asian
Languages and Literatures); Kelly Jordan
(ROTC); Dorothy Pratt (Arts and Letters);
Thomas Schlereth (American Studies); Phillip
Sloan (Program of Liberal Studies); Thomas
A. Stapleford (History and Philosophy of Science); Kevin Whelan (Keough Institute for
Irish Studies)
Visiting Assistant Professors:
Jonathan Lyon; Kim Pelis; Ramnarayan Rawat;
John Soares
Fellows:
Vincent Carey (Keough Institute, spring
2006); Alan Durston (Erasmus Institute, fall
2005); Susan Fitzpatrick-Behrens (Kellogg
Institute, spring 2006)
Postdoctoral Teaching Fellows:
Margaret Abruzzo; Mioara Deac
GraduateTeaching Fellows:
Nahyan Fancy (spring 2006); Justin Poche
(spring 2006)
Program of Studies. The Department of History
offers courses for undergraduates designed to expose
them to life in the past as it was experienced and
understood in the Americas, Europe, Asia, Africa,
and Australia. Courses offered consist of lectures
and seminars that require students to develop both a
critical appreciation of primary and secondary texts
and skills in historical thinking and writing.
Students interested in majoring in history at the
University of Notre Dame have two options. The
standard major option consists of 10 three-credit
upper-level history courses (beginning with a 3 or
higher), beginning with an exciting introductory
seminar (HIST 33000—History Workshop), which
plunges students into the work of writing history
from the moment they join the major through intensive interpretation of primary source documents. To
encourage breadth of historical knowledge, standard
majors also take a variety of courses emphasizing
different chronological periods and geographical
areas. More specifically, they must take one course
from four of the five following fields: African/Asian/
Middle Eastern history; Ancient/Medieval European
history (to 1500); Modern European history (from
1500); United States history; Latin American history.
One of the four courses must contain substantial
material on the period before 1500. In addition, to
encourage depth in a particular field of interest, standard majors also declare a concentration consisting
of three courses. (These concentrations must be approved by the major’s advisor by the beginning of the
senior year.) Standard majors also take an elective in
any field they choose. To complete their course work,
standard majors take a departmental seminar (HIST
43xxx), which offers the opportunity to conduct primary research and produce a substantial paper.
The second option is a supplementary major,
consisting of eight three-credit upper-level history courses (beginning with a 3 or higher). The
supplementary major is designed for those majoring
in other departments but also interested in pursuing
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history
a program of study in history. To encourage breadth
of historical knowledge, supplementary majors take a
variety of courses emphasizing different chronological periods and geographical areas. More specifically,
they must take one course from four of the five
following fields: African/Asian/Middle Eastern history; Ancient/Medieval European history (to 1500);
Modern European history (from 1500); United
States history; Latin American history. One of the
four courses must contain substantial material on
the period before 1500. In addition, supplementary
majors take three electives. To complete their course
work, supplementary majors will take a departmental
seminar (HIST 43xxx), which offers the opportunity
to conduct primary research and produce a substantial paper.
Note: While nearly all history courses are taught for
three credits, students can also fulfill requirements by
an accumulation of one-credit mini-courses if they
are offered.
History Honors Program. The History Department
offers a special program of study, the History Honors Program, for the most talented and motivated
standard majors. Each fall semester, the junior class
of history majors are invited to join; those selected
begin the program in the spring semester of their
junior year. A student in the History Honors Program will take 11 three-credit upper-division History
courses to satisfy both the Honors Program and History Major requirements. In addition to taking the
introductory gateway course (HIST 33000—History
Workshop) and a variety of courses emphasizing
geographical and chronological breadth (see the
standard major option above), the student also takes
two special Honors seminars. Instead of completing
a departmental seminar, the student researches and
writes a senior thesis, receiving three credits in each
semester of the senior year. Each History Honors
student will select a field of concentration and takes
two additional courses in this field to complete the
program. In the spring of the junior year, the student
enrolls in an Honors Program Methodology Seminar
(HIST 53001), designed to introduce the student to
the various methods historians utilize to analyze and
write about the past. (Students admitted to the Honors Program, but studying abroad during the spring
semester junior year, are exempt from HIST 53001.
They must, however, register a thesis topic and advisor with the director of Undergraduate Studies by
the end of that semester.) In the fall of the senior
year, the student will enroll in an Honors Program
Reading and Discussion Colloquium (HIST 53002),
intended to introduce the student to basic issues of
critical interpretation and historiography through a
specific field. In the fall and spring of the senior year,
the student will work on a thesis (up to 50 pages)
under the supervision of a specific faculty member.
The student will register for HIST 58001 (three senior thesis credits) each semester of the senior year.
Phi Alpha Theta. Students who have completed
at least four major-level courses in history, earning
a grade point average of 3.5 or above, and whose
cumulative grade point average is at least 3.2, are
eligible for the Notre Dame chapter of Phi Alpha
Theta, a national history honor society. The History
Department initiates new members once per year.
Course Descriptions. The following course descriptions give the number and title of each course.
Lecture hours per week, laboratory, and/or tutorial
hours per week, and credits each semester are in
parentheses.
HIST 10040. Current Affairs: Historical Context
(1-0-1)
This is a one-semester, one-credit-hour course, open
only to first-year students. The purpose of the course
is to provide a forum in which students can follow
and discuss contemporary world affairs beyond the
headlines. Students will read The New York Times on
a daily basis, and will come to class prepared to discuss the events in the news. In addition, each student
will choose a specific and continuing newsworthy
topic to follow over the course of the semester. The
student will research the historical background of
this subject and give a presentation on this issue to
the class. A paper of approximately eight pages will
be due on this topic at the end of the semester.
HIST 10200. Western Civilization I
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): HIST 12200
A survey of the central themes in Western civilization from ancient Mesopotamia to the Renaissance.
Emphasis will be on problems of social organization,
especially the mutual obligations and responsibilities
of individuals and states; evolving concepts of justice;
aesthetic standards; religious ideas and institutions;
basic philosophical concepts; different kinds of
states; and the ideologies that defined and sustained
them.
HIST 12200. Western Civilization I Tutorial
(0-0-0)
A weekly tutorial required for students registered for
HIST 10200, Western Civilization I, or its
cross-lists.
HIST 10210. Ancient Greece and Rome
(3-0-3) Mazurek
An introduction to the major historical and cultural
periods of ancient Greek and Roman civilization
through close reading of texts central to the Classical Greek and Latin literary traditions. Topics to be
considered include: concepts of the divine; heroism
and virtue; concepts of gender; democracy, empire,
and civic identity. The course aims to deepen students’ appreciation for the classical roots of their own
social, intellectual, and religious lives.
HIST 10400. Western Civilization II
(3-0-3) Bergen
Corequisite(s): HIST 12400
This course will provide a comprehensive overview
of European history over the last four centuries.
During this period European states emerged as
powerful institutions, extending their control over
the peoples of Europe, and battling with each other
for territory, subjects, and status, both in Europe and
throughout the world. The enormous growth of state
power provoked opposition from both elites and
ordinary people. This course will explore resistance
to the state as well as tracing its growth, with special
attention paid to the English revolution in the 17th
century, the French and Russian revolutions in 1789
and 1917, and the collapse of the Soviet empire in
the late 20th century. Particular attention will be
paid to the development of the ideologies of liberalism, socialism, and nationalism, which defined new
relationships between people and their states in the
19th and 20th centuries. The changing status of
women, and the emergence of feminism as another
ideological alternative, will be dealt with as well. The
conflicted relationship between Europe and its colonial territories will constitute another major theme.
HIST 12400. Western Civilization II
(0-0-0)
Corequisite(s): HIST 10400
A weekly tutorial required for those registered for
HIST 10400 or its cross-lists.
HIST 10409. Collapse of European
Communism
(3-0-3)
Why did certain countries become communist regimes after World War II? And how did communism
collapse there? This course will explore the rise and
fall of communism in Eastern Europe from World
War II to 1989. Emphasis will be placed on the
Hungarian, Czech, Polish, and Yugoslav experiences.
HIST 10600. US History I: to 1877
(3-0-3) Coleman
Corequisite(s): HIST 12600
A survey of the social, cultural, and political history of the British North American colonies and
the United States to the close of the Civil War.
Organized around the question of American “nationhood,” topics include Native American, European,
and African encounters; regional development and
divergence; imperial conflict and revolution; constitutional development and argument; democratization and its implications; religious impulses and
reformism; immigration and nativism; the importance of land and westward expansion; slavery and
emancipation; sectional division and Civil War.
HIST 10605. US History II: from 1877
(3-0-3) Rodriguez
Corequisite(s): HIST 12605
This course will be a survey of the political, diplomatic, economic, social, and cultural development
of the United States from 1865, the end of the Civil
War, to 1988, the end of the Ronald Reagan presidency. Major topics to be covered include post-war
reconstruction, the Industrial Revolution of the late
19th century, the progressive legislation of Presidents
Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, the
causes of the Wall Street Crash and Great Depression, the New Deal programs of Franklin Roosevelt,
World Wars I and II, the Fair Deal and containment
policies of Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower’s
Modern Republicanism, the New Frontier of John
Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society, the civil
rights and feminist movements, Vietnam, Richard
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Nixon and Watergate, and the presidencies of Gerald
Ford, Jimmy Carter, and Ronald Reagan.
HIST 10612. American Catholic Experience
(3-0-3) Cummings
Corequisite(s): HIST 12612
This course will examine the history of the Irish in
the United States. In many respects the Irish are the
great success story in American history. They have
moved from the shantytowns of urban America to
the boardrooms of Wall Street. Along the way they
have left their mark on American politics, literature,
religion, and the labor movement. These are the
areas that the course will study. The course begins in
the 18th century when large numbers of Irish immigrated to North America. Then we will examine
the Great Famine of the 1840s and the subsequent
immigration of over one million Irish people to
the US. The great themes of Irish American history—politics, literature, religion, and labor—will be
the focus of our study as we examine the Irish during
the century of immigration, 1820–1920. We will
conclude our study with an overview of 20th century
Irish America and the new Irish immigrants of the
1980s and 1990s.
HIST 10750. History of US National Security
Policy since the 1890s
(3-0-3)
In the aftermath of 9/11, with American troops deployed in Afghanistan and Iraq, and concern about
the nuclear ambitions of such nations as North
Korea and Iran, “national security” is the phrase that
is often discussed and is of crucial importance to
informed citizens. This course will examine national
security policy: what it is, how it is formulated and
executed, and how US national security policies have
evolved since the 1890s. Using a variety of readings
and films such as Casablanca and Dr. Strangelove,
this course will examine US national security policies
from the late 1890s through two world wars, the
interwar period, the Cold War, the post-Cold War
years, and up to the current post-9/11 world. We
will identify continuities and departures in historic
US national security policies, and consider the roles
of policymakers and their critics in a self-governing
society.
HIST 12600. US History I Tutorial
(0-0-0)
Corequisite(s): HIST 10600
A weekly tutorial required for students registered for
HIST 10600, US History I, or its cross-lists.
HIST 12605. US History II Tutorial
(0-0-0)
Corequisite(s): HIST 10605
A weekly tutorial required for those registered for
HIST 10605, US History II, or its cross-lists.
HIST 12612. American Catholic Experience
Tutorial
(0-0-0)
Corequisite(s) : HIST 10612
This course is a survey of the history of Roman
Catholicism in the United States from colonial times
to the present. We will consider, among others, the
following topics: immigrant and ethnic Catholicism,
women in the Church, Catholic social reform, devotional and parish life, and the relationship between
Catholicism and American democracy. Texts for the
course include a general history, two interpretive
works, and a course packet of primary sources. Requirements include a midterm and final examination
and three short (3–5 pp.) essays.
HIST 13184. History University Seminar
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the seminar method of instruction that explores the major methodologies of the
historical discipline and which accents the organization and expression of arguments suggested by readings in historical topics.
HIST 20075. Introduction to Islamic Civilization
(3-0-3)
This course provides an introduction to Islamic
civilization and Muslim culture and societies through
scholarly works, literature, media clips, films, and
audio-video material (some made by the instructor during recent trips to the Middle East). The
background readings will provide a context for the
audio-visual material, giving a general overview of
the history of the Islamic world from the advent of
Islam to the present day. The ultimate goal of this
course is for students to gain a better understanding
of the Muslim peoples and their culture and societies
within the broader context of Islamic civilization.
Focal point: brief overview of the canons and basic
tenets of Islam as a world religion, recognition and
transcendence of stereotypes, awareness of Western
culture and political influence on today’s ArabIslamic world and vice versa, and exposure to Middle
Eastern culture.
HIST 20076. Revelation and Revolution
(3-0-3)
Between the years 100 and 1000 AD, Christianity
and Islam were born and struggled for supremacy as
world empires. The rivalry that resulted was religious
and theological, but it expressed itself in story, art,
and imagination. This course follows the early progress of a rivalry that continues to our own day. [Topics include history of religious interaction, politics
of empire, Arabic literature, mytho-poetics, art, and
architecture.]
HIST 20204. King Arthur in History and
Literature
(3-0-3)
This course—intended to introduce undergraduates
to one of the major themes as well as to the interdisciplinary approaches characteristic of medieval
studies—is a team-taught examination of the development and influence of the legend of Arthur, King
of Britain, both in history and in literature. The historical Arthur is very obscure, but he was probably a
Romanized Celtic war-leader who fought the invading Anglos and Saxons at the beginning of the history of what was to become England. His memory
was preserved in the oral literature of his own people,
now called the Welsh, but he was soon converted
into a mythic hero surrounded by magical companions. In the 12th century, this legendary Arthur was
not only incorporated into the new historiography of
England (since 1066 under the rule of French-speaking Normans), but into the new genre of literature
created in France around 1150—the chivalric
romance—which itself embodied a new ideal for
the relationship between men and women derived
from the songs of the troubadours of the south. The
great majority of these tales of love and marvelous
adventures written over the next four centuries were
to be set in the court of the legendary Arthur, and
the Round Table was invented in this period as the
central focus of the ideals it was made to represent.
History soon began to imitate literature, as kings and
princes attempted to emulate the idealized Arthurian
court in their tournaments and other court festivities, and from 1330 to 1469 actually founded orders
of knights based on the Round Table. The class will
read the relevant parts of some of the chronicles,
histories, and epics in which Arthur was mentioned,
as well as a representative sample of the Arthurian romances of the later period, and of related documents
like the statutes of the chivalric orders.
HIST 20290. Castles and Courts in Medieval
Europe
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): HIST 22290
The expanded title of this course is Castles, Castellanies, and Courts in Latin Europe, 900–1650. This
course will examine the high period in the history of
the castle—a combination of fort and residence—of
the castellany or district subjected to the domination
of a castle, and of the household and court of the
kings, princes, and barons who built such residences
and organized their lives and their activities within
their various structures. It will first consider the
castle as a form of fortification, review briefly the
history of fortifications before 900, and examine
the ways in which lords and their builders steadily
improved their defensive capabilities in response to
new knowledge and to new methods and tools of
siegecraft. It will then examine the relationship of
the castle to the contemporary forms of non-fortified
or semi-fortified house, and finally its relationship
to the lordly household (the body of servants organized into numerous departments associated with
particular rooms or wings of the castle) and with the
court (or body of soldiers, officers, allies, students,
and temporary guests) who filled the castle when
the lord was present. The course will conclude with
an examination of the history of the castellany as a
form of jurisdiction. The course will concentrate on
the castles of the British Isles and France, but will
examine the great variety of types found throughout
Latin Europe.
HIST 20400. Western Civilization II
(3-0-3) Bergen
This course will provide a comprehensive overview
of European history over the last four centuries.
During this period European states emerged as
powerful institutions, extending their control over
the peoples of Europe, and battling with each other
for territory, subjects, and status, both in Europe and
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throughout the world. The enormous growth of state
power provoked opposition, from both elites and
ordinary people. This course will explore resistance
to the state as well as tracing its growth, with special
attention paid to the English revolution in the 17th
century, the French and Russian revolutions in 1789
and 1917, and the collapse of the Soviet empire in
the late 20th century. Particular attention will be
paid to the development of the ideologies of liberalism, socialism, and nationalism, which defined new
relationships between people and their states in the
19th and 20th centuries. The changing status of
women, and the emergence of feminism as another
ideological alternative, will be dealt with as well.
The conflicted relationship between Europe and
its colonial territories will constitute another major
theme. In addition to political and social developments, this course will treat in broad terms the major
cultural and intellectual trends in Europe, examining
the growth of the critical spirit in the Enlightenment and the emphasis on feeling and subjectivity
in the age of Romanticism. The course will conclude
with a section on recent developments, focusing on
efforts to create an integrated Europe, and on the
emergence of the current tensions that divide Europe
and the United States. Slides, music, and film will be
used to illustrate and supplement material treated in
lectures. Students will be assigned a general text and
about five additional books, including both primary
and secondary sources. The grade will be based on
two short essays, a mid-term and final exam, and on
class participation. Students registering for this class
are also required to take a corequisite.
HIST 20600. US History I: to 1877
(3-0-3) Coleman
Corequisite(s): HIST 22600
A survey of the social, cultural, and political history of the British North American colonies and
the United States to the close of the Civil War.
Organized around the question of American “nationhood,” topics include Native American, European,
and African encounters; regional development and
divergence; imperial conflict and revolution; constitutional development and argument; democratization and its implications; religious impulses and
reformism; immigration and nativism; the importance of land and westward expansion; slavery and
emancipation; sectional division and Civil War.
HIST 20605. US History II: 1877 to the Present
(3-0-3) Rodriguez
Corequisite(s): HIST 22605
This course will be a survey of the political, diplomatic, economic, social, and cultural development
of the United States from 1865, the end of the Civil
War, to 1988, the end of the Ronald Reagan presidency. Major topics to be covered include post-war
reconstruction, the industrial revolution of the late
19th century, the progressive legislation of Presidents
Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, the
causes of the Wall Street Crash and Great Depression, the New Deal programs of Franklin Roosevelt,
World Wars I and II, the Fair Deal and containment
policies of Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower’s
Modern Republicanism, the New Frontier of John
Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society, the Civil
Rights and feminist movements, Vietnam, Richard
Nixon and Watergate, and the presidencies of Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, and Ronald Reagan. The
class format will be two lectures each week and one
discussion session. There will be three short writing
assignments, a midterm, and a final examination.
HIST 22290. Castles and Courts in Medieval
Europe
(0-0-0)
A weekly tutorial required for those registered for
HIST 20290, Castles and Courts in Medieval Europe, or its cross-lists.
HIST 22400. Western Civilization II Tutorial
(0-0-0)
Corequisite(s): HIST 20400
Required tutorial for HIST 20400 and its cross-lists.
HIST 22600. US History 1 Tutorial
(0-0-0)
Corequisite(s): HIST 20600
Required tutorial for HIST 20600 and its cross-lists.
HIST 22605. U.S. History II Tutorial
(0-0-0)
Corequisite(s): HIST 20605
Required tutorial for HIST 20605 and its cross-lists.
HIST 20612. American Catholic Experience
(3-0-3) Cummings
Corequisite(s): HIST 22612
This course is a survey of the history of Roman
Catholicism in the United States from colonial times
to the present. We will consider, among others, the
following topics: immigrant and ethnic Catholicism,
women in the Church, Catholic social reform, devotional and parish life, and the relationship between
Catholicism and American democracy. Texts for the
course include a general history, two interpretive
works, and a course packet of primary sources. Requirements include a midterm and final examination
and three short (three- to five-page) essays. Students
enrolled in this class must also take HIST 22612, a
tutorial.
HIST 20910. History of Mexico
(3-0-3)
Mexican history is often portrayed as a recurring
conflict between foreign conquests and an authentic
Mexican culture. We will examine this theme over
500 years of Mexican history, from indigenous cultures and the Spanish conquest to the 20th-century
revolution and its social consequences. Through
readings, lectures, discussions, art, and film we will
explore the roots of modern Mexico and its development from the 15th century to the present. No
background in Mexican or Latin American history
is required.
HIST 22612. American Catholic Experience
Tutorial
(0-0-0)
A weekly tutorial required for those registered for
HIST 20612 or its cross-lists.
HIST 33000. History Workshop
(3-0-3) Cobb, Constable, Kselman
This course introduces students to how historians
study the past. Students will gain insight into the
nature of historical inquiry through discussion of exemplary works of history, analysis of primary source
documents from various time periods and places,
and, most important, their own efforts to write
history. Readings will include important secondary
historical works as well as discussions of how historians actually do history. Writing assignments will
include at least two 10-page histories written by each
student from primary source documents. This course
is a requirement for—and open only to—history
majors pursuing the standard major in history (not
the supplementary major).
HIST 30050. African History to 1800
(3-0-3)
This course introduces students to major themes in
African history to 1800. It investigates agricultural
and iron revolutions, states and empires, religious
movements, and patterns of migration and labor
exploitation. The latter part of the course focuses on
Africa in the era of trans-Atlantic slave trade, from
1550 to 1800. We will study the various methods
that historians use to investigate the past; we will
also delve into some of the intellectual debates surrounding pre-colonial Africa and the slave trade.
By the end of the course, students will have a firm
understanding of states and societies in Africa in the
pre-colonial period.
HIST 30060. African History since 1800
(3-0-3)
This course will focus on African history from 1800
to the independence movements of the 1960s. In the
19th century, new states, economies, and societies
emerged in Africa as African peoples developed new
relations among themselves and with the rest of the
world. With the “scramble for Africa” of the 1880s,
European powers colonized Africa and suppressed
many of these processes. In the 1960s, however, selfrule resurged as Africans helped throw off the yoke
of colonial rule and form independent nation-states.
This course will consider the social, economic, and
political history of Africa by using case studies from
the Democratic Republic of Congo (Congo-Zaire),
Nigeria, Sierra Leone, and South Africa.
HIST 30080. Medieval Middle East
(3-0-3) Cobb
This course offers a survey of Middle Eastern history from the rise of Islam in the seventh century
CE until the rise of Mongol successor polities in
the 15th century. The course is structured to cover
political and cultural developments and their relationship with broader changes in society during the
formative centuries of Islamic civilization. Specific
topics include the career of the Prophet Muhammad
and the origins of the earliest Muslim polity; the
creation and breakup of the Islamic unitary state (the
Caliphate); the impact of Turkic migrations on the
Middle East; social practices surrounding the transmission of learning in the Middle Ages; the diversity
of approaches to Muslim piety and their social and
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political expression; popular culture; non-Muslims
in Islamic society; and the creation of the medieval
Islamic “international” cultural order. Among the
more important themes will be long-term cultural
and social continuities with the Islamic and ancient
Near East, and concepts of religious and political
authority.
HIST 30085. Modern Middle East
(3-0-3)
This course surveys Middle Eastern history from
1500 to the present. The primary themes to be
covered include: the emergence and demise of the
last Muslim unitary states; European colonial and
imperial penetration of the Middle East in the
19th century; the social and cultural impact of imperialism; state-building in the 20th century; new
ideologies/nationalisms; and contemporary problems
of political and economic development. We will also
consider the most important movements of Islamic
reform and revival over the past two centuries.
HIST 30106. Modern South Asia
(3-0-3)
More than one-fifth of the world’s population lives
in South Asia, a region comprised of the modern
nations of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka,
Nepal, Bhutan, Afghanistan, and the Maldives. This
introductory course will provide a survey of issues
and events in South Asian history from the establishment of British East India Company rule in 1757
to the decolonization of South Asia in 1947. The
course will explore the following themes: the rise of
a trading company, the East India Company and its
transition into a colonial power; the emergence of
a colonial economy; colonial production of knowledge; 19th- and 20th-century cultural, religious, and
political movements and formations of new identities; the emergence of elite and popular nationalisms;
independence; and the partition of the subcontinent.
HIST 30110. Ancient Japan
(3-0-3)
This course provides training in understanding and
engaging history as a series of wide-ranging debates.
The class will examine three issues: first, the politically charged question of Japan’s origins in myth
and archeology; second, the question of whether
the forces of Chinese culture or nature as disease
and environmental degradation defined the Yamato
state from the sixth to the ninth century; and, third,
whether Heian court power until about 1200 rested
on economic, political, military, judicial, or aesthetic
grounds. The second purpose of the course, the development of the disciplined imagination necessary
to enter another culture and another time, relies on
the reading of primary texts in translation. There will
be three tests and several classroom assignments.
HIST 30120. Modern Japan
(3-0-3)
This introduction to modern Japanese history
focuses on political, social, economic, and military
affairs in Japan from around 1600 to the early postWWII period. It considers such paradoxes as samurai
bureaucrats, entrepreneurial peasants, upper-class
revolutionaries, and Asian fascists. The course has
two purposes: (1) to provide a chronological and
structural framework for understanding the debates
over modern Japanese history; and (2) to develop
the skill of reading texts analytically to discover the
argument being made. The assumption operating
both in the selection of readings and in the lectures is
that Japanese history, as with all histories, is the site
of controversy. Our efforts at this introductory level
will be dedicated to understanding the contours of
some of the most important of these controversies
and judging, as far as possible, the evidence brought
to bear in them.
HIST 30123. The Japanese Empire and
Literature
(3-0-3) Bowen-Stryuk
Japan emerged on the global stage as an imperialist power with the defeat of China in 1895 (over
Korea) and the defeat of Russia in 1905 (again, over
Korea). By the end of the World War I, the “Japanese
Empire” included Taiwan, Korea, the south Pacific
islands called Nan-yang, and the southern half of
Sakhalin, not to mention the late 19th century acquisitions Okinawa and Hokkaido. Hardly a static
referent from 1895 until its dismantling upon defeat
in 1945, the “Japanese Empire” must have meant
something terribly different, depending on whether
you were a Japanese national or colonial subject; a
man or a woman; in the military or a man of letters;
a domestic worker or colonial settler; businessman
or maid. Even within the Japanese archipelago—indeed, even at the height of government censorship
on cultural production in the early to mid 1940s—the meaning of the “Japanese Empire” was a site of
cultural contestation.
This class looks at the literary and artistic production—fiction, memoirs, poetry, film, visual arts and
drama—of the 50-year rise and fall of the Japanese
Empire. A current of this class deals with the interAsian, Bolshevik-inspired organizations that looked
to Japanese radicals, with no little irony, for solidarity in the fight against Japanese imperialism.
HIST 30140. Premodern China
(3-0-3)
The course will provide a general survey of Chinese
history from the Shang Dynasty (l766–1027 BC) to
1600 AD. Besides highlighting the major developments of each dynasty, the course will devote special
attention to the Confucian and legalist underpinnings of the Chinese empire, the influence of Buddhism on Chinese society, the emergence of gentry
culture and the civil service examination system,
and the phenomenon of “barbarian” conquest and
cultural interaction.
HIST 30141. History of Chinese Medicine
(3-0-3) Murray
In light of the contemporary currency of certain
Chinese practices in the field of alternative medicine,
this course will explore the phenomenon of Chinese traditional medicine in both its historical and
contemporary settings. The first unit, Medicine in
Ancient China, will explore the earliest medical ideas
of the Chinese and will demonstrate how the state’s
political unification gave rise to a correlative cosmology that not only included Heaven and Earth, but
also human beings as integral elements of an organic
cosmos. The second unit will explore the influences
and contributions of Taoism (Daoism) and Buddhism to Chinese medicine and will explore what
it meant to be both physicians and patients in late
imperial China. The third unit will focus on medicine in contemporary China and will feature the
experiences of Elisabeth Hsu, a student of Chinese
medical anthropology who, as a part of her doctoral
research, enrolled as a student in Yunnan Traditional
Chinese Medical College between September 1988
and December 1989. We will conclude the course
with a brief examination of the influence of Chinese
medicine on the contemporary world.
HIST 30142. Chinese Mosaic: Philosophy,
Politics, Religion
(3-0-3)
This course is a special-topics class that provides an
introduction to the diverse life ways constituting the
puzzle of the Chinese people. The course will chart
the terrain of current Chinese imagination as it has
been shaped from the contending, and often contentious, influences of religion, philosophy, and politics,
introducing students to the heralded works of the
Chinese intellectual tradition while at the same time
requiring critical engagement with the philosophic
and religious traditions animating this culture. Thus,
as they learn about China, students will also reflect
on how it has been interpreted by Chinese and by
Westerners. From readings in both primary texts and
secondary interpretations, the class will reconstruct
the ethos of the Chinese, attending particularly to
the ways in which inherited traditions have been affected by the rise of the modern, authoritarian state.
Our concerns will include questions of philosophy
as a response to moral crisis, the abridgement of
tradition in ideology, the creative reinvention and
persistence of popular religion, and the politics of
representation. From our attempts to address these
concerns, we will reconstitute the philosophic discourse of ancient China and the religious practice of
the present in an unconventional, but more evocative, manner that engenders understanding of contemporary political resistance to single-party rule.
HIST 30143. Chinese Ways of Thought
(3-0-3)
This is a special-topics class on religion, philosophy,
and the intellectual history of China. Conventionally
it is assumed that the religion and philosophy of the
Chinese can be easily divided into three teachings:
Daoism, Buddhism, and “Confucianism.” This class
questions this easy doctrinal divisibility by introducing the student to the world-view and life experience
of Chinese as they have been drawn and local cultic
traditions, worship and sacrifice to heroes, city gods,
earth gods, water sprites, nature deities, and above
all, the dead. China’s grand philosophical legacy
of Daoism, Buddhism, “Confucianism,” and later
“Neo-Confucianism” with which we have become
familiar in the West, derived from the particular
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historical contexts of local practice and it was also in
such indigenous contexts that Islam and later Christianity were appropriated as native faiths.
HIST 30150. Modern China
(3-0-3)
The course will provide a general survey of Chinese
history from 1644 (the establishment of the Qing
Dynasty) to the present. It will highlight China’s
evolution from a period of strength and unity during
the last dynasty to a period of disunity and weakness
during the revolutionary period 1911–49, back to
a period of strength under the Communist government from 1949 to the present. Special attention
will be given to the problems of economic modernization, the role that foreigners have played in
this process, and the relationship of both to cultural
development.
HIST 30201. History of Christianity to 1500
(3-0-3)
A survey of the development of Christianity from
late antiquity to the eve of the 16th-century Reformation. Emphases include processes of Christianization, definitions of prescribed and proscribed beliefs
and practices, institutional elaboration, relations
with imperial and royal authority, impact of and
on culture, and varieties of religious behaviors. Although the history of the Latin (Catholic) church is
highlighted, the dynamics and consequences of its
separation first from the Oriental and then from the
Orthodox churches will be examined. The course
aspires to achieve a routine of interactive lectures.
There will, in addition, be three small-group reading
seminars and at least one individual conference. Requirements include three short (five to six pages) papers that engage the texts discussed in the seminars,
midterm and final examinations, class attendance
and participation. The written examinations seek to
assess knowledge applied as analysis.
HIST 30211. Women in Antiquity
(3-0-3)
The categories of female and male and the dynamics between men and women fascinated the ancient
Greeks and Romans every bit as much as they do us
today. Considering the immense influence of ancient
Greek and Roman culture upon our own, we should
not be surprised that much of our current thinking about modern gender roles has its roots in the
literature and history of ancient Greece and Rome.
This course examines the various roles, behaviors
and values associated with women and men in
Greco-Roman antiquity in order to provide students
with: 1) a fuller understanding of the texture and
dynamics of ancient Greek and Roman society; and
2) a better appreciation of the historical and cultural
background to some of today’s gender debates. We
will make use of a wide variety of sources-poetry,
drama, history, art, and archaeology-to study and
contextualize both mythological and literary representations of women and material evidence for the
everyday lives of actual Greek and Roman women.
Class topics and readings follow chronologically and
are structured as follows: (1) Women in Greek Myth;
(2) Women in Archaic Greece (late 8th–6th c. BCE);
(3) Women in Classical Athens (5th–4th c. BCE); 4)
Women in the Hellenistic World (4th–1st c. BCE);
and (5) Women in the Roman World (7th c. BCE3rd c. CE). Students will be evaluated on the basis
of class participation, a midterm and final exam, and
two short essays.
HIST 30212. History of Ancient Medicine
(3-0-3)
This course will trace the development of Ancient
medicine from the neolithic period down to the
second century after Christ. The emphasis will be on
three cultures, Egyptian, Greek, and Roman. How
historians use the three main categories of evidence
{written documents, human remains, and artistic
representations) will be clearly Illustrated.
HIST 30220. Greek History
(3-0-3)
The purpose of the course is to provide a basic narrative history of Greece from the Bronze Age through
the Roman conquest. The second purpose is systematic insight into special problems of two key phases
of Greek development, the archaic and classical
periods. The rapid growth of the city-states and the
cultural ideals and problems that led to the invention of philosophy and tragedy are considered. The
course then takes up the institutions and policies of
democratic and imperialistic Athens and the political
theories they embodied. The class ends with a look at
the new Hellenistic world and the impact of Greek
values on Christianity. The grade is based primarily
on two essay exams plus the final.
HIST 30222. Gods, Heroes, Mysteries, Magic
(3-0-3)
Contrary to popular belief, the ancient Greeks were a
strange bunch. Their statues were not really pristine
white marble; their beliefs were hardly consistently
rational. With this mindset as our starting point,
in this course we will examine some literary (epic,
hymns, tragedy, comedy), archaeological (temples,
sanctuaries), and material (vase paintings, coins,
votives, curse tablets) remains of the ancient Greek
world to develop a picture of its varied and unique
religious beliefs and practices. In addition to this
historical perspective, this course will also take an
anthropological and cultural approach to the study
of Greek religion. We will consider anthropological
definitions of religion and read comparative material
from other cultures. Finally, in articulating Greek religious beliefs and practices, we will further consider
how these institutions intersected with politics, gender, and class within and among Greek city—states,
focusing on ancient Athens for which we have the
most thorough documentation.
HIST 30230. Roman History
(3-0-3) Mazurek
This course introduces students to ancient Roman history by tracing the development of Roman
civilization through the major political, religious
and social institutions of the Roman Republic and
Empire. Major topics of study will include: Rome’s
conquests in Europe and the Mediterranean; the
careers of Julius Caesar and the Emperor Augustus;
Rome’s treatment of foreign peoples and institutions
(e.g. early Christianity).
HIST 30231. Roman Law and Governance
(3-0-3)
The course will provide a historical overview of
Roman Republican and Imperial law from the XII
Tables to Justinian’s Digest. We will investigate not
only the Roman judiciary and juristic writings, but
also the other branches of government, in order to
create a thorough understanding of the bureaucratic
operation of the ancient Roman state. Specific topics
covered include civil law, criminal law, constitutions,
juries, jurists, magistracies, assemblies, and provincial
administration. In addition to taking a midterm and
final, students will write and rewrite one three- to
five-page paper. Prior study of Roman history is recommended, but not required.
HIST 30260. Late Antiquity
(3-0-3)
This course will explore the transformation of the
Roman World from about 300 to 600 AD. We
will ask: was the “fall” of the Roman Empire a
civilizational catastrophe? Or was it a slow, messy
process blending continuity and change? Or was late
Antiquity itself a dynamic and creative period? Our
emphasis will fall on the changing shape of Roman
public life; the barbarians and their relations with
Rome; the emergence of the Catholic Church; the
triumph of Christian culture; and literature, art, and
architecture in the late imperial world. There will be
a midterm and a final. Students will write either one
term paper or a series of shorter papers. Readings
will emphasize primary sources.
HIST 30261. Middle Ages I
(3-0-3) Lyon
This course will examine the history of the Roman
world from the time of the first incursions of barbarians into the Roman empire in the 3rd century to
the time of the final invasions in the 10th. It will
concentrate first on the crises of the 3rd century, and
on the consequent transformation of the relatively
unified, urbanized, tolerant, polytheistic Roman Empire of late Antiquity into the two distinct, deurbanized, intolerant, monotheistic, and politically divided
civilizations of Latin or Catholic Christendom and
Greek or Orthodox Christendom. Next it will briefly
examine the emergence in the 7th century of the
new monotheistic religion of Islam and of the new
civilization and empire centered on it, which quickly
conquered not only the old Persian empire but
most of the Asian and all of the African provinces
of the continuing Roman empire, and in 711–18
conquered most of Spain as well. The remainder of
the course will concentrate on the history of Latin
Christendom and its pagan barbarian neighbors to
the north and east between the beginning of the
Germanic conquests of the western provinces c. 400
and the final conversion of the peoples of central and
northern Europe to Christianity and the simultaneous emergence of a new socio-political order in the
older kingdoms around 1000. There will be two
short papers, two tests, and a final examination.
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HIST 30263. World of Charlemagne
(3-0-3)
The Carolingian (from carolus, Latin for Charles:
Charles the Great—Charlemagne—was the most
famous Carolingian) period, roughly the 8th and
9th centuries, was foundational for Western Europe.
But this was also the time when the mid-Byzantine
Empire consolidated its position and when the Abbasid family of caliphs introduced important and
durable changes in the Islamic world. This course
will focus on the West in the age of Charlemagne,
but will draw frequent comparisons with and make
continuous reference to Europe’s Byzantine and Islamic neighbors. The course will explore such themes
as: Europe’s Roman and Christian inheritances from
antiquity; the peoples of the Carolingian world;
kingship and empire; political and social institutions
and ideologies; religious and secular law; war and diplomacy; agriculture and trade; the church—popes,
bishops, monks, and nuns; theology; art and architecture; Latin and vernacular literature. Reading
assignments will combine modern scholarship and
primary sources (in translation). Students will write
midterm and final examinations and will choose between several short papers or one long paper.
HIST 30270. Middle Ages II
(3-0-3)
This course is a thematic survey of the high
(1000–1300) and late (1300–1500) Middle Ages.
The course begins with an introduction to three
emblematic developments of the high Middle Ages:
cathedral-building, the crusading movement, and
the beginnings of the universities. Themes addressed
include the nature of high medieval religion, the
agricultural and commercial revolutions, and high
medieval politics and patronage. Treating the later
Middle Ages, the course focuses upon a catastrophic
event and an epic poem. The Black Death (and related late-medieval catastrophes) has traditionally been
seen as marking a turning point in European history.
To what extent is this so? Finally, Dante’s Inferno will
offer a window into key issues of late-medieval religious culture, including papal politics, the role of the
laity in religion, late-medieval philosophical thought,
heresy, and the Italian city-state as the site of a new
Renaissance of learning.
HIST 30273. World of the Late Middle Ages,
1300–1500
(3-0-3) Van Engen
The course studies Europe in the time of the late
middle ages, roughly 1300–1500, often called a time
of crisis: plague, war, rebellion, economic upheaval.
But it was also a time of enormous achievement, of
Dante and Chaucer, of new techniques in warfare
and government, of conciliar representation in
church and state, of extravagant display in fashion
and building. This course will proceed by way of
both secondary and primary readings, with at least
three short papers and student discussion required.
HIST 30291. Politics and Religion in Medieval
Europe
(3-0-3)
This course considers the intersection between political action and religious claims in medieval Europe.
Virtually all the powers—kings and popes, princes
and bishops—claimed to act on religious principle
and in accord with transcendent notions of virtue or
world order. And yet they fought bitterly with each
other, with words and with swords, and mutually
condemned one another. The course will begin with
the showdown between emperors and popes known
as the investiture contest, then take up pivotal figures
like Pope Innocent III, King Frederick II, and Pope
Boniface IX, and conclude with sections on the
spiritual Franciscans and on conciliarism. Two papers
based on primary sources, one midterm, and a final.
HIST 30293. American Social Movements
(3-0-3)
Where does social protest fit in the history of American politics? What counts as activism? This interdisciplinary survey of civil rights and social protest
movements in the United States examines 19th- and
20th-century movements, as well as several contemporary protest movements. These movements
certainly question selected American ideologies, but
they also draw on American values and practices. We
will use history, film, fiction, journalism, and autobiographies to trace several traditions of protest that
both depend on and offer challenges to a democratic
society.
HIST 30296. War and Diplomacy in the Middle
Ages
(3-0-3) Lyon
What kinds of governments and “non-state actors” engaged in warfare and diplomacy during the
European Middle Ages? Were battles and military
campaigns commonplace between approximately
500 and 1500 AD? Did the rulers of Europe in this
period develop effective strategies for settling their
disputes in more peaceful ways? This course will give
students the opportunity to answer these and other
questions about the nature of war and diplomacy
in the Middle Ages. Topics will include the Roman
Empire’s efforts to control the waves of Germanic
invaders; the dynastic disputes that regularly threatened to destroy the Merovingian and Carolingian
Empires; the Viking incursions; the Papacy’s conflicts
with the rulers of Germany; the crusaders’ strategies
for conquering and maintaining control of the Holy
Land; the emergence of the Italian city-states as military powers; and the Hundred Years War. Through
lectures, discussions, and the reading of a broad
range of primary sources, students will be challenged
to think about how various types of medieval rulers
used war and diplomacy to achieve their political
goals.
HIST 30330. Muslims and Christians in
Medieval Europe
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): HIST 32330
The encounter between Christianity and Islam began
in the 7th century, AD, the time of the Prophet
Muhammad. Within a few centuries, Islamic rule
had spread across the southern Mediterranean world
from Syria to Spain. This shift initiated a long-term
relationship—-sometimes hostile and sometimes
peaceful—-between Christians and Muslims in these
regions. The neighboring presence of Islam had an
enduring influence on medieval Christian theology,
philosophy, medical knowledge, literature, culture,
imagination, art, and material life. Likewise, developments in Christian Europe and Byzantium, especially the Crusades, affected the Islamic world. This
course will trace the history of the Christian-Muslim
relationship, from its beginnings in the early medieval period until the Renaissance (15th century). The
heritage of this medieval encounter still has profound
resonance in the modern world of today.
HIST 32330. Muslims and Christians in
Medieval Europe Tutorial
(0-0-0)
A weekly tutorial required for those registered for
HIST 30330, Muslims and Christians in Medieval
Europe, or its cross-lists.
HIST 30331. Medieval Spain
(3-0-3)
This lecture course will cover the history of medieval
Spain from the Visigothic period (6th to the 7th centuries) until the time of Ferdinand and Isabella (15th
century). The main focus of the course will be the
interaction (both congenial and confrontational) of
the three religious groups resident in the Iberian Peninsula: Christians, Jews, and Muslims. The course
will proceed roughly chronologically, with pauses
to consider particular topics in social, intellectual,
and economic history. Interspersed with lectures,
discussion sessions will concentrate on close readings
of primary texts and consideration of some of the
historiographical problems peculiar to Spanish history. There will be several short papers, a midterm,
and a final exam.
HIST 30350. Humor and Violence in History
(3-0-3)
This course explores the relation between humor and
violence from Western antiquity to the present, and
works from the premise that humor is a response
and antidote to violence and suffering. We will use
a wide range of literary works, films, and students’
assignments to investigate our subject. Course requirements include numerous short quizzes, three
analytical and creative papers of intermediate length,
and group presentations.
HIST 30352. The Reformation
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s):HIST 32352
A narrative history of Christianity in Western Europe
from c. 1500–c. 1650, which takes an international
and comparative perspective, including Catholicism,
Protestantism, and radical Protestantism. Topics covered include Christianity on the eve of the
Reformation, Christian humanism, Luther and the
German Reformation, the Peasants’ War and Anabaptism, the English Reformation, Calvin and Calvinism, Catholic Reform and the Council of Trent,
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the French Wars of Religion, confessionalization,
the Thirty Years War, and the English Revolution.
Major themes include matters of religious content
(doctrinal positions and devotional sensibilities), the
relationship between different Christian groups and
political regimes, the impact of religious changes
across the population, and the definitive emergence
of Christian pluralism. Lectures plus discussion.
directions they might be taking. The approach of
the course is neither revisionist nor traditionalist. In
such controversial areas, it is impossible to give really
broad answers that everyone will find acceptable.
HIST 30407. Europe between the Wars
(0-0-0)
A weekly tutorial for those enrolled in HIST 30352
or its cross-lists.
(3-0-3) Crago
Between the end of the First World War and the
beginning of the Second, there were only 20 years.
But during this short period were Hitler, Stalin, the
Great Crisis, the League of Nations, and much more.
Understanding the present requires knowledge of
these pivotal years.
HIST 30353. The Catholic Reformation
HIST 30408. Holocaust
HIST 32352. The Reformation
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): HIST 32353
This course will examine some of the main historical
realities, theological developments, and traditions of
spirituality within Roman Catholicism c. 1450–c.
1700, the period of Catholic reform both before and
after the emergence of the Protestant Reformation.
The class format will be two lectures plus one discussion-based tutorial section per week, the latter based
on the reading of primary sources in translation.
Major topics to be discussed include the character
of the late medieval church and reforming efforts
within it (e.g., the Observantine movement, Christian humanism); Roman Catholic response to the
Protestant Reformation, including the Roman Inquisition; the revival of existing and emergence of new
religious orders (especially the Society of Jesus); the
Council of Trent and its implementation among the
clergy and laity; Catholic missionary activity in Asia
and the Americas; post-Tridentine Catholic art and
scholarship; the relationship between the Church
and European states in the 16th and 17th centuries;
Jansenism; and the flowering of Catholic spirituality
in the 17th century.
HIST 32353. The Catholic Reformation—
Tutorial
(0-0-0)
A weekly tutorial required for those registered for
HIST 30353, The Catholic Reformation, or its
cross-lists.
HIST 30401. History of Christianity II, 1500 to
the Present
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the development of modern
Christianity, with emphasis on the West. Subjects
include ideas and movements of reform, church
government and structures, missionary enterprises,
forms of spirituality and worship, and the political
role and cultural impact of Christianity. Requirements: two examinations and class participation,
including three reading seminars with papers.
HIST 30406. Europe in the Twentieth Century
(3-0-3)
This course presents a general history of the world
from a European perspective, 1917 to 1989. The
goal of this course is to convey a broad understanding of various policies—what they have and have
not been, the major problems they faced, and the
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): HIST 32408
In this lecture/discussion class, we will study the
Nazi German program of mass killings that has come
to be known as the Holocaust. We will explore the
ideas, decisions, and actions that culminated in the
murder of an estimated hundred thousand people
deemed handicapped, half a million Roma (Gypsies),
and six million European Jews. The role of historical
prejudices, the impact of National Socialist ideology and leadership, and the crucial factor of the
war itself will all be considered. We will address the
experiences of those targeted for annihilation as well
as the actions of perpetrators and the role of others:
bystanders, witnesses, and rescuers. At the same time
we will examine how attacks on other groups—for
example, homosexuals, Polish intellectuals, Soviet
prisoners of war, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and AfroGermans—fit into the overall Nazi scheme for a
“new world order.” The legacy of the Holocaust after
1945 will be discussed as well. Course requirements
include short papers in response to weekly readings,
a comparative book review, and a cumulative final
exam.
HIST 32408. Holocaust Tutorial
(0-0-0)
A weekly tutorial required for those registered for
HIST 30408, The Holocaust, or its cross-lists.
HIST 30409. Europe since 1945
(3-0-3) Wegs
This course will include discussion of the history,
politics, and culture of the post-World War II period. Beginning with the destruction wrought by
the war, it will examine closely the tie between the
economic-political resurgence of Europe, and the
development of the “Cold War.” Important subjects
covered include the development of the European
Union, the development of consumer societies, the
1968 turmoil in both the West and East, the establishment and eventual collapse of the dictatorships in
Russia and eastern Europe, the growing internationalization of European economies after the 1960s, the
“normalization” of politics and societies after 1970,
the end of the Cold War, and the major role of European countries throughout the world in the contemporary period. Naturally, the role of individuals in
these broad transformations will not be neglected.
HIST 30411. British History: 1660–1800
(3-0-3)
This course of lectures and readings concentrates
on British (that is. Scottish as well as English) history from the restoration of monarchy in 1660 to
the great crisis detonated by the French Revolution
and war in the 1790s. Themes include the politics
of Protestant dissent, political ideologies, the role of
parliament, Jacobitism, and the rise of the radical
parliamentary reform movement.
HIST 30415. England since 1789
(3-0-3)
The course involves, besides lectures, reading and
thinking about and discussing both the history and
the interpretation of major elements in the development of modern English politics, society, and culture. Requirements include regular class attendance
and participation, midterm and final examinations,
and 20 to 25 pages of writing associated with the
small seminars into which the class will divide a few
times during the semester.
HIST 30416. The Great Victorian Experiment:
England in the Long Nineteenth Century
(3-0-3) Deac
A thematic survey of Great Britain during the long
19th century, from the impact of the French revolution in 1789 to the first World War I in 1914. The
period saw the emergence of many of the most
characteristic and most controversial features of
the modern world, such as industrialism, capitalism, the welfare state, the expansion of civil and
political rights, and the colonial development of the
nonwestern world. The course uses the three themes
of introspection, innovation, and inquiry to understand these changes. Nineteenth-century Britain is
known for its earnestness, the intensity with which
its elites scrutinized their souls on everything from
the foundations of faith to social responsibility to
their own sexuality. It is known also for an enormous
amount of social-technical innovation, planned and
unplanned, of steam engines, sewers, and slums, of
new ways of organizing work and handling money,
of new aspirations, of new classes and class relations,
and of new modes of social organization and social
control. Finally it is known as a time of passionate
spirit of inquiry, a time of a massive increase in literacy and of hunger for knowledge, a time of immense
confidence when it was felt that new knowledge
from economics, sociology, biology, geography, and
would provide true, rational, and fair answers to all
political problems and conflicts.
HIST 30431. Irish History I
(3-0-3) Smyth
This course explores the main themes in Irish histories from the plantation of Ulster, after 1603, to the
rebellion of 1798 and the Act of Union with Great
Britain in 1800. Attention focuses on plantation,
colonization, and religious conflict; the Cromwellian
reconquest and the Williamite wars in the 17th
century, and the anti-Catholic penal laws and rise
of Protestant Ascendancy in the 19th century. This
dramatic and formative period witnessed the emergence of many of the forces and rivalries that shaped
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modern Irish politics and society and continues to
generate lively disagreement among historians today.
supplemented by discussions, readings, and some
films.
HIST 30432. Irish History II
HIST 30465. Twentieth-Century German
History
(3-0-3)
This course will consist of lectures and readings
examining Irish political history and Anglo-Irish
relations from 1801 up to and including the current
conflict in Northern Ireland. Attention will be given
to religious conflict, the development of romantic
and revolutionary nationalism, the changing nature
of Anglo-Irish relations, and the special problems of
the North. A mid-semester examination, a paper/
essay, and a final will be required.
HIST 30450. France: From the Old Regime to
the Revolution
(3-0-3) Kselman
In 1700, France, under the Sun King, Louis XIV,
was the most powerful state in Europe. Louis’ court
at Versailles was a brilliant cultural center, envied
by the rest of Europe, whose kings saw France
as a model to be emulated. In 1789, the French
Revolution challenged and eventually destroyed the
monarchy, but the power of France nonetheless grew.
By 1800, France, under the leadership of the consul
Napoleon, was expanding rapidly in Europe, and
would eventually control an empire that included
Spain, Italy, and much of central Europe. This course
examines French history from the establishment of
the Bourbon family on the throne in 1589 to the rise
of Napoleon in 1790s, with about one-third of the
class concentrating on the revolutionary events that
began in 1789. The course is organized around major political developments, and seeks to understand
how the monarchy, so potent in 1700, could have
collapsed less than a century later. Students will also
read, listen to, and view some of the great cultural
achievements of the time-the plays of Moliere, the
music of Lully, the novels of Voltaire, and the paintings of David. The course will generally consist of
lectures on Monday and Wednesday and discussions
on Friday. Students will read about six books, a
mixture of primary and secondary sources, which
will form the basis for discussions. There will be a
midterm and a final, and students will also write one
10-page essay on a topic of their choice.
HIST 30451. Modern France
(3-0-3)
This course will survey the history of France in the
19th and 20th centuries and will balance attention to
political and social developments with an interest in
French culture. Themes will include: the revolutions
of the 19th century that culminated in a democratic
republic; industrialization and the persistence of the
peasant ideal; changes in women’s roles, gender relations, and sexuality; colonialism and imperialism;
victory in World War I; defeat and collaboration in
World War II; the role of intellectuals in French social life; decolonization and postcolonialism; cultural
and ethnic differences in contemporary France; and
Franco-American relations. Students will develop an
appreciation for the vitality of the French past and
an understanding of the current role of France in
Europe and the world. The format will be lectures
(3-0-3)
This course examines modern Germany from national unification in 1871 to the recent unification
of the two Germanies and beyond. We will investigate cultural, political, and social dimensions of
Germany’s dynamic role in Europe and in the world.
Topics include Bismarck and the founding of the
Second Reich, World War I and the legacy of defeat,
challenge and authority in the Weimar Republic, the
National Socialist revolution, war and Holocaust,
collapse of the Third Reich, conflict and accommodation in East and West Germany, and unification
and its aftermath. Class format will combine lectures
with discussion of readings from political, social,
literary, and diplomatic sources.
HIST 30471. Early Imperial Russia, 1700 to
1861
(3-0-3)
This course will analyze crucial developments in the
political and cultural history of early imperial Russia
meaning Russia from the late 17th century to the
mid-19th century. Among the questions treated will
be: the unitary state in late 17th-century Russia; the
religious schism between Orthodox and Old Believers; the making of the empire under Peter the Great
and Catherine the Great; the rise of the serf system;
comparisons between serfdom and American slavery;
the Napoleonic wars; the development of political opposition to the autocracy; and the abolition
of serfdom. The course will combine lectures and
discussion. Requirements will include a five-to-seven
page paper, a midterm examination, and a final examination. The instructor hopes students will come
to learn and have fun; he will. No prior knowledge
of Russian history is needed.
HIST 30472. Late Imperial Russia
(3-0-3)
This course examines Russian history from the end
of serfdom in 1861 to the revolutions of 1917. The
instructor will acquaint students not only with the
political history of Russia in this turbulent period,
but also with topics that are sometimes neglected
in broad surveys: the resemblances between Russian
serfdom and American slavery; the history of family
life, gender relations and sexuality in Russia; the role
of religion in defining Russian identities; the psychological underpinnings of political radicalism and
terrorism; the difficult relationships between various
ethnic groups in the “prison of peoples.” Course
requirements will include a short essay, a midterm
examination, and a final examination. No prior
knowledge of Russian history required.
HIST 30473. Twentieth-Century Russian
History
(3-0-3) Lyandres
This course will examine some of the most important ideas, events, and personalities that shaped
Russian and Soviet history from the beginning of the
last tsar’s reign in 1894 to the emergence of the Soviet Empire at the end of the Second World War. In
particularly, we will explore the role of politics and
ideology in Russian society, the origins of Leninism
and the creation of the first socialist state as well as
the experience of Stalinism and the Nazi-Soviet War.
Students will be asked to take two examinations and
to write a term paper.
HIST 30474. Russian History since World
War II
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the history of Russia and its
peoples in the second half of the 20th century, with a
particular focus on the role of ideology, politics, and
culture in Soviet and contemporary Russian society.
We will explore the emergence of the Soviet Empire
at the end of WW II, the experience of late Stalinism
and post-Stalinist socialism, the collapse of the communist regime, and the disintegration of the Soviet
Union in 1991, as well as Russia’s uneasy transition
“out of totalitarianism” during the last decade of
the 20th century. Students will be asked to take two
exams and to write a 10-page term paper.
HIST 30481. East-Central European History II
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): HIST 32481
A survey of the history of East-Central Europe from
the partitions of Poland to the outbreak of World
War II. The lecture will place special emphasis on
the political, social, and cultural histories of Poles,
Czechs, Slovaks, Croats, and Hungarians.
HIST 32481. East-Central European History II
Tutorial
(0-0-0)
A weekly tutorial required for students registered for
HIST 30481, East-Central European History II.
HIST 30482. Eastern Europe since 1945
(3-0-3)
The course surveys the emergence of communist
Eastern Europe in the wake of World War II, and
then explores the seminal developments that contributed to the collapse of communism. Emphasis
will be placed on the Hungarian, Czech, Polish, and
Yugoslav experiences. Students in the course will
examine the evolution of East European society by
reading traditional historical and political writings
as well as drawing on literary and film accounts of
the period. Although a lecture class, the instructor
has reserved Fridays for in-class discussion. Students
will read approximately seven books. They will also
be expected to sit for a midterm examination and a
final examination, and to complete a 10- to 15-page
research paper.
HIST 30490. Nineteenth- and TwentiethCentury Polish History
(3-0-3)
This lecture course explores Polish history from the
partitions to the present. Special emphasis will be
placed on understanding Poland’s changing political,
cultural, social, and physical geography. Politically
effaced from the map of Europe twice in the two
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centuries under study, Poland ceased to exist as a
political nation between 1797 and 1918 and 1939
to 1945. In the wake of World War II, moreover,
Poland’s geographies shifted once more as the country changed physical shape and simultaneously came
under Soviet rule. Each time independence melted
away, the Polish nation grew stronger and experienced social, cultural, and political transformation,
ultimately spearheading the drive of all of Eastern
Europe to overthrow communist rule. Although
basically a lecture course, the instructor will provide
ample opportunity for discussion and questions in
class. About seven books will be assigned. There will
be a mid-semester and final examination, as well as
a paper.
HIST 30498. Polish History since 1945
(3-0-3)
The aim of the course is to trace major post-World
War II historical processes in Europe by examining
Polish history. Therefore, it will survey the emergence of Cold War divisions, anti-communist uprisings, and the offspring of new democracies, which
now aspire for membership of the European Union.
Students will explore such questions as: How was the
installation of communism in Poland ever possible?
How did Poles resist the system and what role did
the Catholic Church play in opposition movements?
What were the perils of the Polish road toward democracy, and how does democracy work in presentday Poland? We will investigate the role of the US in
supporting Poland’s way to freedom and get to know
the main actors of the Polish political scene. The
course is designed to foster a broader understanding
of contemporary Poland, a country returning to play
a lively role in the world.
HIST 30500. Italian Renaissance, 1400–1650
(3-0-3)
This course examines the political, cultural, social,
and religious history of Italy from about 1350 to
1550. Starting with an extended study of Florence,
its economic foundations, social and political structures, artistic monuments, and key personalities, the
course then examines how the culture of the Florentine Renaissance spread to the rest of Italy, especially
to the papal court of Rome and the princely courts
of northern Italy, and, finally, to the new nationstates of northern Europe. Key topics will include:
the growth of the Italian city-state; the appearance
of new, Renaissance “characters” (the merchant,
the prince, the courtier, the mercenary, the learned
lady, the self-made man); Renaissance humanism
and the classical revival; the relationship between art
and politics; and Renaissance ideas of liberty, virtue,
historical change, and the individual’s relationship to
God. The course will not tell a story of steady progress from medieval to modern institutions, societies,
and modes of thinking; rather, we will consider the
Renaissance as a period in flux, in which established
traditions thrived alongside creative innovations and
vigorous challenges to authority. Students will write
one long paper and take a midterm and a final exam.
HIST 30501. Early Modern Rome
(3-0-3)
This course traces the interlocking histories of the
papacy and the city of Rome from the Renaissance
to the birth of the modern Italian state. Topics will
include the rise and fall of the papal monarchy;
cultural and intellectual life at the Vatican court; the
urban fabric of Rome from the Renaissance to the
Baroque; the peculiar strains of Roman society; and
the tumultuous relationship, both political and cultural, between Rome and the rest of Europe from the
Reformation to the age of revolution. The course will
proceed chronologically, but will pause frequently
to examine special topics including: the Renaissance
cardinal and his household; Michelangelo’s Rome;
the building of St. Peter’s; Jesuit science; the trial of
Galileo; archaeology and antiquarianism; the Roman
Carnival; the Inquisition; Bernini’s Rome; the Grand
Tour; Rome in the Romantic imagination; and
Napoleon’s Rome. Students will write several short
papers in response to readings and visual materials,
and take a midterm and a final exam.
HIST 30550. Technology of War and Peace
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the impact of military technologies on world history from the 16th century onward.
Topics include the rise of gunpowder weaponry
and the fortification revolution in the early modern
period, navalism, particularly in the 19th century,
the role of military technologies in European colonial expansion, and the science-based military of
the 20th-century, chemical and biological (and socalled “soft-kill”) weapons, leading up to the age of
nuclear weapons. The course considers also military
technologies as deterrents, military technologies as
expressions of culture, and the issue of warfare as a
stimulus to technological development.
HIST 30581. Modern European Diplomacy
(3-0-3)
This course will investigate some of the main problems in the history of European relations from the
middle of the 19th century to the present. The emphasis will be on the patterns of political interaction
between and among the European powers (Britain,
France, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Russia, and
Italy). We shall also examine their respective military
strategies, both in peacetime and in war, and whether
those strategies changed over time. Our other concern will be to place European relations with the
context of the great-power system as a whole.
HIST 30583. War, Violence, and Politics in
Europe since World War I
(3-0-3) Orr
This class will examine the management and effects
of armed conflicts on European society and politics
since the First World War. Although centered on
Europe, this course will be geographically expansive.
In recognition of the powerful tie between events in
Europe and events in the Middle East or Southeast
Asia, the course will study Europe within a global
context to probe the interrelation of war and society—and especially democracy—in 20th-century
Europe. The overriding question of the course will
be, “How has politically motivated violence shaped
and been shaped by European societies?” Course
themes include the effects of domestic political structures on war, the effects of war on racial and gender
norms, the effects of race and gender on war and
political violence, and the attempts to come to terms
with terror as a political weapon.
HIST 30584. Empires: Their Rise and Fall
(3-0-3) Rainbird
This course will examine the history of empire and
imperialism, from its commencement in antiquity
to its decline in the 20th century, focusing on the
period from the “high point” of imperialism in the
early 19th century to decolonization. Although the
emphasis of the course will be on the imperial efforts
of European powers, non-European empire building
will also be discussed to better illustrate the international implications of the phenomenon.
HIST 30601. Colonial America
(3-0-3) Slaughter
This course considers the history of New World
exploration and settlement by Europeans from the
15th century to the 18th century. It examines the
process of colonization in a wide variety of cultural
and geographic settings. It explores the perspectives
of Indians, Europeans, and slaves with a particular
emphasis on the consequences of interracial contacts.
We will discuss the goals and perceptions of different groups and individuals as keys to understanding
the violent conflict that became a central part of the
American experience. Lectures, class discussions,
readings, and films will address gender, racial, class,
and geographic variables in the peopling (and depeopling) of English North America.
HIST 30602. Revolutionary America
(3-0-3)
When speaking of the American Revolution, many
writers reach for a comment made by John Adams in
1818 that, “[T]he Revolution was effected before the
war commenced. The Revolution was in the minds
and hearts of the people. . .” Whether this assertion
is true historically or not, it still does not adequately
describe what that revolution was. The American
Revolution obviously had its political elements, primarily the formation of the United States. To reach
its political goals, military means were necessary.
Without a successful War for Independence, there
would have been no revolution. To leave matters
there, however, would be insufficient. A fuller understanding of the revolution would need to address
how it affected the whole spectrum of American life.
It would consider the revolution as a social movement that challenged the political and social hierarchies of the day. It would also ask how the revolution
affected those who were not white males, especially
women, slaves, and Native Americans. Without considering the possible negative implications of the revolution, any telling would be incomplete. This class
will take up these challenges and attempt to make
a full-orbed presentation of the events surrounding
the American Revolution. It will introduce students
both to elites and to those whom the popular narrative glosses over. It will attempt to count the losses,
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history
as well as the gains, which flowed from the move to
independence from Britain. Finally, it will attempt
to describe the many changes through this period,
which resulted, not only in a new political nation,
but in a new society and culture—changes that in
varying degrees are still with us today and of which
contemporary Americans are the inheritors.
HIST 30603. The New Nation, 1781–1841
(3-0-3)
This course examines the social, political, and cultural history of the United States from the ratification of the Constitution to the beginnings of the
political crisis over expansion and slavery. It covers
the democratization of politics and the problems of
national independence in the wake of the Revolution; territorial expansion; economic change; the development of regional, class, religious, racial, ethnic,
and gendered subcultures; slavery and resistance to
slavery; and the new political and reform movements
that responded to the era’s deep and lasting changes.
HIST 30604. US Civil War and Reconstruction,
1848–77
(3-0-3)
Arguably the study of the American Civil War is
a suitable training ground for novice historians,
for traditionally, a historian must learn to examine
events and issues from varying perspectives. Indeed,
in this course, emphasis lies not only on the events
of the period, but also on the interpretation of those
events by different interest groups. Students are
expected not only to learn the facts of the era, but
also to think about the consequences of events on
different sections and different peoples. This course
divides the period into three sections: the coming
of the Civil War, the War, and Reconstruction. A
test follows the end of each section; half of the final
exam will be on the Reconstruction section and the
rest will be comprehensive. In addition to the tests,
students will write a short paper and a short book
review.
HIST 30606. Gilded Age and Progressive Era
(3-0-3)
Through discussion and lectures students will examine the emergence of a recognizably modern United
States. Topics examined will include: the emergence
of the corporation, Progressive reforms, the changing
contours of American religion, the character of the
New South, the battle for women’s suffrage, developments in the arts, and American involvement in the
First World War.
HIST 30608. The United States, 1900–45
(3-0-3) Blantz
The purpose of this course is to study the political,
diplomatic, economic, social, and cultural development of the United States from 1900 to 1945. Major
topics will include the background for Progressive
reform, the New Nationalism and New Freedom administrations of Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow
Wilson, the diplomacy of the early 20th century, the
causes and results of World War I, the Republican
administrations of the 1920s, the New Deal administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt, isolationism and
neutrality in the inter-war period, and the American
home front during World War II. There will be a
required reading list of approximately seven books,
two shorter writing assignments, and three major
examinations, including the final.
HIST 30609. United States since World War II
(3-0-3)
The purpose of this course is to study the political,
diplomatic, economic, social, and cultural development of the United States from 1945 through the
presidency of George H.W. Bush. Although the
military and diplomatic history of World War II will
be considered by way of background, the principal
topics of investigation will be the Fair Deal Program
of President Truman, the Cold War, the Korean
Conflict, the Eisenhower Presidency, the New Frontier, Vietnam, President Johnson’s Great Society, the
Civil Rights Movement, the Nixon years, the social
and intellectual climate of this post-war era, and the
presidencies of Gerald Ford through George H.W.
Bush. There will be a required reading list of approximately six books, two smaller writing assignments,
and three examinations.
HIST 30611. Latinos in the United States
generations perceive them, what we collectively remember and what we forget—may be as important
as the wars themselves in influencing American
culture. This class will examine the memory of wars
in American history from the colonial period to the
present. We will consider the memory of wars between colonists and Native Americans, the American
Revolution, the Civil War, World War I, World War
II, and Vietnam.
HIST 30613. Violence in US History
(3-0-3) Mason
In the late 1960s, black militant H. Rap Brown
exclaimed, “Violence is as American as apple pie.” It
might be said that the purpose of this entire course
will be to evaluate the truth of Brown’s statement.
This will be accomplished in two ways: first, by
surveying of some of the major episodes and themes
of violence in American history, from its colonial
origins through contemporary foreign policy and
domestic debates; and second, by assessing the meaning of that violence as it simultaneously reflects and
shapes American society, culture, and values. This
course will include significant reading and writing
components, as well as a group project.
(3-0-3)
This course will examine the history of Latinos/as
in the US. Readings and discussions will trace the
founding and development of early MexicanAmerican communities in the present-day Southwest. We will then topically and chronologically
cover the post-1900 urban and regional experiences
of Latin American-origin immigrants, migrants,
and exiles throughout the US. The focus will be
on those people coming from Mexico and the Hispanic Caribbean, but immigrants from Central and
South America are also included. Some of the areas
of emphasis are the Chicano Movement and civil
rights; Latino music and culture; race, ethnicity, and
the family; education; and contemporary trends in
transnational migration. The instructor will necessarily adopt a comparative approach, and students will
study and critique a variety of interpretations and
ideologies. Lectures and discussions will be supplemented with visual material. Grading will be based
primarily on two midterm essay exams and a final
research paper (10 pages).
HIST 30617. Women and Religion in US
History
HIST 30612. War, Memory, and American
History
HIST 30618. United States Labor History
(3-0-3) Grow
Wars have always cast long shadows over American
history. The 2004 presidential election—with its
heated rhetoric about swiftboats, discarded medals, National Guard string-pulling, and even forged
documents—has been a timely reminder that the
memory of the Vietnam War continues to pervade
American life. These events have coincided with a
surge of recent historical scholarship that has argued
that memory matters in American history. In particular, battles over the meaning and memory of wars
have shaped American culture and politics long after
the actual bullets have stopped flying. The memory
of wars—how the participants and subsequent
(3-0-3)
The course is a survey of women and religion in
America during the 19th and 20th centuries. Among
others, we will consider the following themes: how
religion shaped women’s participation in reform
movements such as abolition, temperance, and civil
rights; how religious ideology affected women’s work,
both paid and unpaid; the relationship between
religion, race, and ethnicity in women’s lives; female
religious leaders; and feminist critiques of religion.
We will examine women’s role within institutional
churches in the Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish
traditions, as well as raise broader questions about
gender and religious belief. How did religious belief
affect women both as individuals and in community?
How could religion be used to both reinforce and
subvert prevailing gender ideology? Course requirements include a midterm and final examination,
several short writing assignments, and a final paper
(10–12 pages) on a subject of the students’ choice.
(3-0-3) Graff
This course will examine the history of paid and
unpaid labor in the United States from colonial
times to the near present. We will seek to understand
how working people both shaped-and were shaped
by-the American Revolution, early industrialization,
the debates over slavery and free labor culminating
in the Civil War and Reconstruction, the rise of big
business, the creation of a national welfare state, the
Cold War-era repression of the Left, and continuing
debates over the meanings of work, citizenship, and
democracy. Throughout the course, we will devote
considerable time to the organizations workers themselves created to advance their own interests, namely
the unions and affiliated institutions that have made
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history
up the labor movement. We will also pay special attention to the crucial connections between work and
identities of class, race, and gender as they evolved
over the past two centuries.
HIST 30619. American Thought, Belief, and
Values since 1865
(3-0-3)
A study of Americans’ most characteristic intellectual, moral, and religious beliefs and why these
have flourished in the American cultural setting. The
course will survey American history with emphasis
on topics such as Old World influences on American ideals, the relation of American materialism
to American beliefs, the relation of individuals to
communities, the outlooks of diverse subcultures,
competing religious and secular faiths, religion
in education, the search for truth in a pluralistic
society, moral authority in democratic culture, the
competing authorities of faith and science, social
science and civil law, popular philosophies such as
Enlightenment ideals, romanticism, pragmatism,
and postmodernism, and the impact of mass media
on American beliefs and values. Substantial readings,
discussions, short reports and papers on readings,
and exams will be required.
HIST 30626. Medicine in Modern History
(3-0-3)
This course examines health as a unifying concept
in American history. It follows several themes: how
class, race, and gender; as well as age; lifestyle; and
place have manifested themselves in differential
health experience; the ongoing conflict between
personal liberty and the interests of the state, the remarkable diversity of American medical systems and
their close relation to religious and social diversity;
the place of medicine in Americanization campaigns;
the changing political economy of American medicine; and finally, the emergence of health as the core
concern of the American dream. In short, by the end
of the course you should have a good understanding of the uniqueness of American medicine and its
central place in America’s history. You should have
acquired an historical and critical context that will be
of use in your own encounters with matters of health
and medicine—as intelligent citizens and about
issues of public health and questions of medical ethics, and as creative thinkers about more satisfactory
modes of medical practice and health improvement
and protection. The course will use three to five
texts, and require exams, project, and presentation.
HIST 30627. History of the American West
(3-0-3) Coleman
Few American regions have generated as many cultural narratives, myths, and icons as the transMississippi West. This course takes both the reality
and the romance of the West seriously, asking students to examine how the American conquest of the
West inspired storytelling traditions that distorted
and shaped the region’s history. To get at this interaction, we will read novels, histories, and first-hand
accounts as well as view several Hollywood westerns.
The class is reading- and discussion-intensive.
Students will write several short papers as well as a
longer final essay.
HIST 30628. American Legal History
(3-0-3) Rodriguez
This seminar-style course deals with the interaction
between the legal system and social change in the
United States from the 1600s to the 1980s. Primary
emphasis is given to the 19th-century and 20th-century, two periods where American legal culture took
on much of its fundamental character and adjusted
to significant social change. Main themes include
the relationships between law and development; individual rights in the public and private spheres; the
development of the legal profession; the post-New
Deal state; and the various US “rights” movements.
Reading consists of primary sources documents and
a short survey text. Grades will be based on a series
of short papers and classroom discussion. Prior
knowledge of American history is helpful but not
required.
HIST 30629. Morality and Social Change in
US History
(3-0-3) Abruzzo
How do we explain sweeping moral changes in
society? Why did so many people support legal slavery for so long, and what motivated others to turn
against it? What is the relationship between social
change and moral theory? The purpose of this class
is to examine the moral frameworks that Americans
have used to understand—and to change—their
society. We will focus on hotly debated issues in
American history, looking at the way that Americans
thought about issues such as slavery, animal cruelty,
sex, family roles, labor, economics, war and citizenship, and civil rights. We will look at both sides of
debates to understand the values and beliefs that
shaped traditions of social change and resistance to
that change.
the later, sophisticated, and diverse cultures of the
Native Americans. The course will focus on material
culture, environmental relationships, and technology
to explore cultural change, land-use patterns, economics, and political complexity. In addition, some
understanding of the methods by which archaeology
is done by scientists in North America and an introduction to historical archaeology are included.
HIST 30651. Prehistory of the American
Southwest
(3-0-3)
This course uses archaeological data and theory to
explore the cultural life of prehistoric Southwest
Americans over the last 12,000 years. The course
emphasizes origins and cultural development from
an early pioneer stage to the later, sophisticated and
diverse cultures of the American Southwest. The
descendants of these cultures include the Pueblo
peoples, the Dene, and the O’odham peoples. In the
course students will explore cultural change, land-use
patterns, economics, and political complexity, using
information on environmental relationships, technology, and other aspects of material culture.
HIST 30652. Women and Work in Early
America
(3-0-3)
Sport, a major part of American entertainment and
culture today, has roots that extend back to the colonial period. This course will provide an introduction
to the development of American sport, from the
horse-racing and games of chance in the colonial
period through to the rise of contemporary sport as
a highly commercialized entertainment spectacle.
Using a variety of primary and secondary sources, we
will explore the ways that American sport has influenced and been influenced by economics, politics,
popular culture, and society, including issues of race,
gender and class. Given Notre Dame’s tradition in
athletics, we will explore the university’s involvement
in this historical process.
(3-0-3)
This course will introduce students to a broad view
of early American social history that foregrounds the
gendered aspects of work in Early America—defined
loosely as the period from colonial settlement to
1820. On one level, this approach allows for the
recovery of women and girls’ contributions to the
formal and informal economies of pre-industrial
early America, including their work activities within
the household. This perspective is especially crucial
to the examination of the gendered ideologies of
white, Native American, and African servitude
and/or slavery. These ideologies dictated the work
experiences of large race-and class-defined segments
of the population. Yet cultural retention also played a
part and this course will invite students to investigate
the impact of derivative work practices (for example
examining African women’s dominance of market
activities in the New World through the lens of West
African work practices). Further, while the course
title emphasizes women’s experiences, the class and
race implications of male work practices in early
America will be similarly illuminated by a gender
studies approach. Thus, an overarching purpose of
the course will be to highlight the fluid and instable
conceptions of work that were applied alternately to
masculine as opposed to feminine occupations, just
as they were alternately applied to European versus
non-European, free versus enslaved, and public versus private spheres.
HIST 30650. Prehistory of Western North
America
HIST 30654. Fashioning Identity in Colonial
America
HIST 30631. Sport in American History
(3-0-3)
This course deals with archaeological data and
cultural life of prehistoric western North Americans
over the last 20,000 years, until contact with European cultures. The course emphasizes origins and
cultural development from an early pioneer stage to
(3-0-3)
This course will focus on dress and material/visual
culture in Colonial North America. It will introduce
methodology, and offer an overview of key themes
in the history of dress and consumerism within the
framework of gender studies. In our focus on the
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history
colonial period (especially the 18th century), we
will analyze the economics of dress (the production,
marketing, and acquisition of cloth and clothing)
and will assess the importance of fashion to commerce and politics. We will evaluate the role of dress
in the construction of colonial identities, and we will
examine the ways that dress operated as a visual locus
for racial, class, and ethnic encounters.
HIST 30700. Survey of African-American
History I
(3-0-3)
This African-American history survey begins with an
examination of West African origins and ends with
the Civil War era. We will discuss the Atlantic slave
trade, slavery in colonial America, the beginnings of
African-American cultures in the North and South
during and after the revolutionary era, slave resistance and rebellions, the political economy of slavery
and resulting sectional disputes. Particular attention
will be paid to northern free blacks.
HIST 30701. Anglo-American Thought
(3-0-3)
A survey of the intellectual history of Britain and
English-speaking America from around 1600 to the
mid-19th century, including European backgrounds
and contexts, with an emphasis on writings about
religion, government, natural science, education, and
human nature. Besides exploring the early-modern
Anglophone world on its own terms, the course aims
to help us understand better the origins and implications of our own ways of thinking. There will be a
midterm examination, a final examination, and a
term paper based on primary sources.
HIST 30703. History of US South to 1877
(3-0-3)
This course will provide a survey of the American
South through Reconstruction. We will briefly
describe Native American societies and early Spanish settlements in Florida and the Southwest before
addressing in greater detail the political, cultural, and
social history of the region as it was settled beginning
in the southeast. We will examine how ideas like
honor, freedom, patriarchy, and religious beliefs were
forged and evolved in the context of a slave economy,
and how they shaped the day’s political questions.
We will also consider the Confederate experience
and Reconstruction.
HIST 30704. History of American Women I
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the social, cultural, and political
developments that shaped American women’s lives
from the colonial period to 1890. It will analyze
both the ways American culture defined women’s
place during different historical periods and the ways
women themselves worked to comply with or to
resist those definitions. Topics include pre-industrial
society, transformations in work and family life,
industrialism and class formation, slavery, women’s
culture, and the emergence of a women’s movement.
Throughout, stress will be laid on the importance of
class, race, and ethnicity in shaping women’s historical experience.
HIST 30705. US Foreign Policy before 1945
(3-0-3) Brady
This course covers the main developments in American foreign relations from the Spanish-American
War in 1898 through World War II. It traces the
emergence of the United States as a major world
power and examines in some detail how the United
States became involved in the two world wars. A
recurring theme will be the major traditions in
America foreign policy and the ways in which these
traditions influenced policy makers in the early years
of the “American Century.”
HIST 30706. Sex, Sexuality, and Gender in the
United States to 1890
(3-0-3) Bederman
Sexuality, like other areas of social life, has a history.
Yet historians have only written about the history of
sex for the last 40 years or so. This course will both
introduce students to a variety of current themes in
the history of sexuality and invite them to consider
how they themselves might research and write that
history. The class will survey recent topics in the
history of sexuality from first colonial settlement to
the end of the Victorian era. Issues we may consider
include different religions’ attitudes towards sexuality (the Puritans were not anti-sex!); how different
cultures’ views of sex shaped relations between colonists and Indians; why sex was an important factor
in establishing laws about slavery in Virginia; birth
control and abortion practices; changing patterns
of courtship; men who loved men and women who
loved women; and why the average number of children in American families fell by 50 percent between
1790 and 1890. Over the course of the semester,
students will also design a small research proposal
on some aspect of the history of American sexuality
prior to 1890. Written assignments will include a
weekly journal, midterm and final examinations; a
book review; and a small research project.
HIST 32706. US Sex/Sexuality/Gender Tutorial
(0-0-0)
A weekly tutorial required for those registered for
HIST 30706, US Sex/Sexuality/Gender to 1890, or
its cross-lists.
HIST 30707. American Intellectual History I
(3-0-3) Turner
The first half of a two-semester sequence surveying
the American intellectual history.
HIST 30750. Race, Ethnicity, and Racism in
Modern America
(3-0-3) Mason
This course will survey American attitudes, beliefs,
and practices regarding race and ethnicity from the
late 19th century to the present, including a consideration of the development and changing meaning of
the concept of “racism.” A major emphasis will be to
trace the shifting constructions of ethnicity over time
and the constantly evolving understandings of what
race entails, how racial boundaries are demarcated
and crossed, and how all these definitions are historically and culturally flexible. Another central theme
will be to trace how various European groups trans-
formed themselves from racial-ethnic outsiders to being “white,” a process that simultaneously expanded
the bounds of inclusion for some and solidified the
terms of exclusion for others.
HIST 30800. Survey of African-American
History II
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): HIST 32800
African-American history II is a course that examines
the broad range of problems and experiences of
African Americans from the close of the American
Civil War to the 1980s. We will explore both the
relationship of blacks to the larger society and the
inner dynamics of the black community. We will
devote particular attention to Reconstruction, the
migration of African Americans from the rural south
to the urban north, and the political machinations
of the African-American community. We will also
examine the political impact of cultural exhibitions.
The course will utilize historical documents in the
form of primary sources, scholarly articles, and other
secondary sources. Classes will be conducted as lecture-discussions. Students enrolled in History 30800
must also take HIST 32800, a tutorial.
HIST 30802. US Political Traditions since 1865
(3-0-3) McGreevy
Students will investigate the political debates—
and simultaneous examinations of democracy’s
character—that have animated American reformers
and intellectuals since the Civil War. The focus will
be on these political traditions, not the studies of
voter behavior or policy implementation that also
constitute an important part of political history. The
course will begin with discussion of the debate over
slavery and Reconstruction, and move through the
“social question” of the late 19th century, Progressive reform in the early 20th century, the New Deal,
the origins of modern conservatism, and various
post-World War II social reform movements. Readings will include court cases, memoirs, speeches,
and a sampling of the philosophical and historical
literature.
HIST 30803. History of the US South, 1876 to
the Present
(3-0-3)
What does it mean for someone, something, or
some place to be “southern”? This course is a study
of peoples, cultures, and identities in the southern
United States since Reconstruction. Emphasis will be
placed on cultural (including pop cultural), political,
and social history.
HIST 30804. History of American Women II
(3-0-3)
This course surveys women’s relationships to the
social, cultural, and political developments shaping
US society from 1890 to the present, concentrating
on developments in women’s activism, work, and
popular culture. Topics include the New Woman
and Progressivism; the transformation of feminism
in the 1920s; women’s role in the development of
the welfare state; women’s paid and unpaid labor;
women’s changing roles in the Depression, World
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history
War II, and Cold War periods; the Women’s Liberation Movement of the 1960s; and the polarized politics of gender in recent decades. Written assignments
will include a 10- to 12-page research paper and
short weekly journals on the readings and lectures.
Readings will include a mix of recent articles and
primary sources. Particular attention will be paid to
the impact of class, race, ethnicity, and sexuality on
issues of gender.
HIST 30850. Twentieth-Century American
Military Experience
(3-0-3)
Is America, as historian Geoffrey Perret contends, a
“country made by war”? Regardless of one’s opinion,
a systematic study of America’s wars is essential to
either confirm or refute the above statement and
obtain a more complete understanding of the nation. There have certainly been ample historical
occurrences to support Perret’s assertion over the last
century, and this course will investigate the validity
of the question by examining the modern American
military experience from after the Franco-Prussian
War of 1871 to the present. We will explore the
causes, conduct, and consequences of the major
military conflicts of the 20th century in which the
US was involved or that had a significant impact on
the US, using traditional historical materials. We will
also read several battlefield memoirs to further examine the conflicts at the tactical level and also explore
the human dimension of war. Using a fundamental
thesis to address war at the political, strategic, operational, and tactical levels, the goal of the course will
be to gain a better understanding of the relationship
among the different levels as well as the importance
of each. As a part of their discovery process, students
will take three essay exams and write a research paper
assessing the combat effectiveness of a particular
unit that existed during this period to assist them in
determining, developing, and delivering a response
to Perret’s statement.
HIST 30854. US Presidents: FDR to Clinton
(3-0-3) DeSantis
A study of the personalities, style, policies, and
performances of American presidents from Franklin
D. Roosevelt to Bill Clinton as they developed the
modern American presidency and made it the most
important elective office in the world.
HIST 30855. Catholicism in Twentieth-Century
America
(3-0-3)
The course examines the patterns of Catholic intellectual life, religious culture, social engagement, and
public presence in the United States throughout the
20th century. Themes receiving special attention in
the lectures and class discussions will include: US
Catholic response to the theory of evolution and to
the social sciences; the rise and decline of Thomism
as the philosophical framework of Catholic thought
and education; Catholic participation in the labor
movement and the Civil Rights Movement; the new
theologies and social ethics of the ’60s; the impact
of the Second Vatican Council; shifting modes of
public Catholicism; the Catholic culture wars of the
1980s and 1990s.
various aspects of Latin American society and culture
until independence in the early 19th century.
HIST 30894. Visual America
HIST 30902. The Emergence of Nationalism in
Latin America
(3-0-3)
Offered as a sequel to American Art (AMST 20107).
The course has two objectives: first, to introduce
students to the various methods scholars have developed to use visual evidence in cultural history
research; and second, to provide students with a content course in United States history, one where they
receive an overview of the various roles that the art
forms noted above have played in 19th- and 20thcentury American life. Iconographic analysis—the
uncovering of past and present, conflicting and paradoxical layers of cultural meanings within an image
or assemblage of images—will be an important part
of the course.
HIST 30897. Home Fronts during War
(3-0-3)
In the wake of the events of September 11 and the
current uncertainty of their effects on our military
actions and international relations, this course
turns to look within the United States. How have
Americans responded at home to war and threats of
war throughout the 20th century and into the 21st?
What internal divisions and shared identities has war
inspired or revealed? In other words, we will examine not the battles and factors that determined the
military outcomes, but the domestic struggles that
have defined our national experience and informed
many of our responses to current events. Topics will
include critiques of democracy and civil rights inclusion during WWI; treatment of Japanese Americans
during WWII; development of peace movements,
anti-nuclear movements; Cold War politics and fears
of American communism; debates over the draft,
just-war, racism at home, and US policies abroad in
the wake of Vietnam. The final unit will focus on
the Gulf War, terrorism, and developments since
September 11, 2001.
HIST 30899. American Social Movements
(3-0-3)
Where does social protest fit in the history of American politics? What counts as activism? This interdisciplinary survey of civil rights and social protest
movements in the United States examines 19th- and
20th-century movements, as well as several contemporary protest movements. These movements
certainly question selected American ideologies, but
they also draw on American values and practices. We
will use history, film, fiction, journalism, and autobiographies to trace several traditions of protest that
both depend on and offer challenges to a democratic
society.
HIST 30901. Colonial Latin America
(3-0-3)
This course provides an introduction to the major
themes of Latin American colonial history, including the discovery, conquest, and settlement of the
New World; the institutional framework established
by the Iberian countries to advance their economic,
political, and religious interests in the region; and
(3-0-3) Jaksic
This course provides an introduction to the major
themes of 19th-century Latin American history. It
provides an overview of the colonial background to
the independence struggle that engulfed the region
in the early part of the century, describes the motivations, and in many cases reluctance, of the colonies
to disengage from the Spanish empire, and the legacies and opportunities for the construction of a new
social, political, and economic order in the region.
The course examines the influence of regionalism
in the emergence of the new nations, and pays
particular attention to the impact of liberalism on
social, political, and economic structures in the region. Course requirements include reading assigned
chapters and essays for each class, a midterm exam, a
book review essay, and a final exam.
HIST 30911. Indigenous and Colonial Mexico
(3-0-3) Beatty
This course investigates the history of Mesoamerica
from the Olmec, Mayan, and Aztec societies to Mexico’s independence from Spain after 1800. We will
examine the nature of several indigenous societies;
their conquest and domination by Europeans; postconquest debates concerning Indians’ nature and colonial Indian policy; the structure of colonial society,
including relations between Indians, Africans, and
Europeans; Catholic conversions and the role of the
Church; and finally the causes of independence. We
will use readings, lectures, discussions, archeological
evidence, film, and literature throughout the course.
Students need not have any background in Latin
American history.
HIST 30912. History of Modern Mexico
(3-0-3)
This course examines Mexico from the late 19th
century to the present. Through readings, lecture,
discussion, film, and research we will visit the major
themes of modern Mexico. Our studies range from
the country’s economic growth at the turn of the
century to NAFTA; from the violent years of revolution after 1910 to the gradual emergence of democracy in the 1990s; and from the many who have
struggled with poverty to those few who have wielded economic and political power. One of the paradoxes of 20th-century Mexico is the juxtaposition of
one of Latin America’s most politically stable nations
in a society filled with divisions and frequently with
conflict. The ways in which the Mexican Revolution,
the nation’s unique agrarian reform project, and latecentury neo-liberalism have shaped Mexico over the
last century will receive particular attention.
HIST 30920. History of Brazil
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the history of Brazil, Latin
America’s largest nation, from its pre-Columbian
roots to the present, with particular emphasis on
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social, economic, and political developments during
that time. Topics will include indigenous people,
the formation of colonial societies and economies,
independence, slavery, abolition and post-emancipation society, immigration, the emergence of populist
politics, industrialization and efforts to develop the
Amazon, military rule, and democratization.
HIST 30925. History of Chile
(3-0-3)
Chile is generally considered as an exceptionally
stable and even prosperous country when compared
with many of its neighbors in the region. This course
will explore the politics, culture, and economy of
Chile since independence in order to assess whether
the country is unique, or has shared many of the
difficulties and challenges of other Latin American
nations. The readings, lectures, and discussions will
cover such topics as Chilean independence, wars,
and revolutions in the 19th century, as well as labor
unrest, political mobilization, and state-led economic
development. The course will also cover the Pinochet
dictatorship and human rights, and the return to
democracy in the 1990s. In addition to textbooks,
students will use other sources, such as novels and
films to explore different facets of Chilean history.
HIST 30975. Making Australia
(3-0-3) Miscamble
The struggle to “make” Australia, as opposed to replicating Britain, got underway early on after European settlement, and it has been in process ever since.
This course will seek to understand and illuminate
this nation-building process. Approximately twothirds of the course will be devoted to examining the
major issues in Australia’s history, beginning with an
appropriate treatment of Aboriginal history through
to the present debates over Australian identity and
the nation’s political structure. The final third of the
course will explore important issues in contemporary
society and culture. This course will have special
interest for students who either have studied or plan
to study in the Notre Dame Australia program. In
addition to reading five or six books, students will
view a number of important Australian documentary and feature films. A willingness to participate
in extracurricular activities is a prerequisite for the
course. (Please keep Wednesday evening clear in your
schedule.) The course will involve lecture, discussion,
and class presentations. Students will write a 10page research paper and take mid-semester and final
examinations.
HIST 32800. Survey of African-American
History II Tutorial
(0-0-0)
A weekly tutorial required for students registered for
HIST 30800, African-American History II, or its
cross-lists.
HIST 37050. Directed Readings
(0-0-V)
Independent study of special topics under the direction of a faculty member. Requires permission of
the faculty member as well as the director of Undergraduate Studies.
HIST 47050. Special Studies
(V-0-V)
Independent study, writing, and research under the
direction of a faculty member.
HIST 40061. Prophets/Protest in African
History
(3-0-3)
This dialogue-intensive seminar focuses on men and
women who led political, religious, and social movements in Africa in the 19th and 20th centuries. The
Islamic Murride brotherhood in Senegal, the Women’s Wars of Nigeria, and the Mau Mau uprising in
colonial Kenya will introduce students to important
episodes in African history and to the intellectual
debates of the field. Students are expected to read a
variety of texts, participate vigorously in class discussion, make oral presentations, and complete written
assignments.
HIST 40084. Christianity in the Middle East
(3-0-3)
The spread of Christianity from Jerusalem into Asia
Minor and Europe is well documented. But Christianity is not a European phenomenon; it is Middle
Eastern and Semitic in its origins. Why was the existence of Christianity in the Middle East marginalized
by the earliest Christian historians? Why is Christianity in the Middle East so inadequately understood
today? This course will examine the evidence for
Christianity articulated in the native Aramaic language and culture of the region. We will investigate
the origins and development of the indigenous “Oriental” churches of Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, and
Iran, and the missionary activity that took the gospel
into India and China. Topics will include the Semitic
approach to Jesus and the Gospel, Christianity and
the Arabs, and the impact of the Crusades. The
course will conclude with an investigation of Islamic
fundamentalism, and the diaspora of Middle Eastern
Christians in Europe and the Americas. Drawing
from local history, native accounts, and archaeological evidence, we will piece together the largely untold
story of Christianity in the Middle East.
HIST 40121. Nation and Culture in Modern
Japan
(3-0-3)
From Gilbert and Sullivan’s operetta, The Mikado, to
the cherry blossom poems of kamikaze suicide pilots
in World War II, the nation of Japan has been presented as obsessed with the arts. But is this aesthetic
image simply ornamental? What are the political
ramifications of a national identity intimately intertwined with ideas of traditional high culture? When
was this association between nation and art made
and why? This course traces the intersection between
high art and national identity in Japan from the
mid-19th century to the mid-20th century (with a
brief postwar postscript.) During this century, Japanese government officials and intellectuals carefully
crafted a national image that went through at least
three stages in relation to high culture. In the early
Meiji period (1868–90), the Japanese leadership had
little use for Japan’s traditional arts and fervently
pursued a policy of Westernization in culture as well
as politics and economics. After 1890, Japanese arts
were revived as a basis for Japanese nationalism, partly because of interest from Europeans and Americans
who were intrigued by Japanese handicrafts, painting, sculpture, and ceremonies. During the Taisho
(1912–26) and early Showa (1926–60) eras, culture
was developed as a bulwark of ultranationalism.
The main focus of this course will be the ideological
and political uses of high culture. Readings for this
course will include primary documents (in translation) as well as secondary works. No background
knowledge of Japanese history is required.
HIST 40122. Concepts of Nature and the
Environment in Japan and Europe
(3-0-3)
The purpose of this course is to explore Japanese
concepts of nature in comparison with those of the
West, and then to ask how these concepts affect
modern Japan’s understanding of environmental protection. In other words, this course combines intellectual history and environmental history, Japan and
Europe. We discuss the relationship among nature,
divinity, and human beings in the Bible and Shinto
and Confucian texts. We read radical agrarian Ando
Shoeki and see how his vision of the natural state
compares with that of his French counterpart, Rousseau. We consider how nature shapes political history
in Hegel and Maruyama. Finally, we try to figure out
what the claim that the “Japanese love nature” means
both in terms of aesthetics and nationalism and in
terms of environmental protection.
HIST 40231. Cicero and Political Tradition
(3-0-3)
The life and writings of Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–
43 BC) have been studied in light of the different aspects of his eventful career as a lawyer and advocate,
orator, politician, statesman, and philosopher. His
surviving writings—political and judicial speeches,
treatises on religion, law, ethics, political philosophy
and rhetoric, and also many personal letters—shed
light on the diverse successes and reversals of his
public and private life. Those who study Cicero tend
to focus on one or two aspects of his achievement to
the exclusion of the others. In this course, we will try
to understand how the different branches of Cicero’s
life and work fit together, why he thought that philosophy, law, and religion were relevant to politics,
and why and how ethical considerations should condition one’s private and public life. In pursuing these
issues, we will think about Cicero’s intellectual and
political predecessors, both Greek and Roman, before reading a selection of his own writings. By way
of understanding some aspect of Cicero’s enormous
influence we will conclude with reading part of The
Federalist Papers.
HIST 40232. Romans and Christians
(3-0-3)
This course will examine the early development
of the Christian religion in its historical Roman
context. It will begin with a survey of the political,
social, and administrative structures of the Roman
Empire in the period from Augustus to Constantine,
move to a study of the complexity and diversity of
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Roman religious life and culture (with special attention to Mystery Cults, e.g. that of Isis), and then
examine the development of the Jesus movement and
Rome’s reaction to it. Particular topics to be studied
will include miracle-working and the practice of
magic, the problem of the historical Jesus, the sectarian and subversive character of early Christianity, the
issue of how persecution and martyrdom are to be
historically understood, and the meaning of religious
conversion in the polytheistic Roman world. Above
all the course will concentrate on the questions of
how and why in historical terms a new religious
system came to have such appeal that Constantine
chose to make himself the first Christian emperor
of Rome.
HIST 40233. Romans and Their Gods
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the way in which the Romans
conceived of, worshipped, and communicated with
the myriad gods of their pantheon. The course will
focus first on conventional religious rituals and their
cultural value, and secondly on the success of Roman
polytheism in adapting to changing historical and
social conditions. Particular attention will be paid to
the so-called “Mystery Religions,” including Christianity, and their relationship to conventional forms of
religious behavior.
HIST 40234. Family/Household in Roman
World
(3-0-3)
A survey of the life-course in Roman antiquity. Topics studied will include: marriage, divorce, child-rearing, old age, the way in which family and household
were conceptualized by the Romans, and the demography of the Roman world.
HIST 40294. Thought and Culture in the High
Middle Ages
(3-0-3)
This is a course about the thought and culture of
Medieval Europe in the years 1100 to 1350. The
course takes seriously the notion of “mind,” that all
people, whatever their gender or social class, were
gifted with powers of understanding and decisionmaking amidst life’s dilemmas. It asks what we know
about how these people thought about, perceived,
and experienced their world, what ideals they set for
themselves, what they hoped to achieve, how they
set about the task of living. The course will proceed
with lectures on specific topics and introductions to
texts or authors, but in good part by way of a careful
reading and discussion of assigned primary sources.
Those sources will range from medieval romances to
mystical poems, from political philosophy to devotional meditations.
HIST 40470. Dostoevsky’s Russia
(3-0-3)
This course will focus: (1) on Dostoyevsky’s life,
his religious and ideological beliefs as articulated in
major fictional and nonfictional works, his contributions to 19th-century debates about Russia’s place in
the world and its historical “mission”; and (2) on the
Russian social, religious and ideological context(s) in
which Dostoyevsky operated. The reading will likely
include Dostoyevsky’s Notes from the House of the
Dead, Notes from the Underground, Crime and Punishment, The Idiot, and Brothers Karamazov.
HIST 40475. Modern Russian Society and
Culture I
(3-0-3)
This course examines selected critical issues in the
foundations of modern Russian society and culture
from the late 19th through the first half of the 20th
century. Lectures and discussions include such topics
as late Imperial politics and society, cultural innovation of the “Silver Age,” World War I, Revolutions
of 1917, creation of socialist society and culture, and
the experience of the Stalinist terror. There will be a
term paper, a midterm, and a final exam.
HIST 40476. Modern Russian Society and
Politics II
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the history of Russia and its
peoples in the second half of the 20th century, with
a particular focus on the role of politics and ideology in Soviet (1941–91) and contemporary Russian
society (1991–2000). We will explore the experience of the Great Patriotic War, late Stalinism and
post-Stalinist socialism, the emergence of the Soviet
Empire at the end of the Second World War, the
collapse of the communist regime and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991, as well as Russia’s
uneasy transition out of totalitarianism during the
last decade of the 20th century. Students will be
asked to take midterm and final examinations, and
to write a term paper.
HIST 40480. Polish and Lituanian
Commonwealth
(3-0-3)
This course will survey the history of the Polish
and Lithuanian Commonwealth from its origins in
the 1386 dynastic union of Jogailo, Grand Duke of
Lithuania, with Hedvig, the daughter of Polish king
Louis the Great (1370–82) through the transformation into a political union at Lublin in 1569 to the
collapse of the Commonwealth, which culminated
in three partitions at the end of the 18th century.
Special emphasis will be placed on the political processes that transformed the Commonwealth into one
of the most democratic countries in the world, but
also ultimately contributed to its decline. Attention,
too, will be paid to the wars that ravaged the Commonwealth, including those with Muscovy, Sweden,
the Ottoman Empire, and with the peoples of what
today is modern Ukraine.
HIST 40551. History of Modern Astronomy
(3-0-3)
Traces the development of astronomy and cosmology
from the late 17th century to the 1930s. Attention is
given to the interactions of astronomy with other areas of science and with philosophical, religious, and
social factors. Satisfies core history requirement.
HIST 40580. Enlightenment In Europe
(3-0-3)
By intensively studying diverse works we shall first
try to map the sheer variety of the cultural achievements of Europeans, from Dublin to Naples and
Koenigsberg to Madrid, during the long 18th century (ca. 1687–1807). Then we shall critically analyze
some of the major scholarly efforts to reduce and
organize it all into some unitary movement, usually
called “The Enlightenment.” Requirements include
actively participating in class meetings, which will
center on our discussions of particular works, two examinations, and writing a 15- to 20-page integrative
essay on one of the major themes (freedom, power,
knowledge, faith, emotions, history, and progress) of
the works we study together.
HIST 40628. African-American Resistance
(3-0-3) Pierce
An exploration of a series of cases of African American resistance throughout US history.
HIST 40630. Crime, Heredity, and Insanity in
American History
(3-0-3)
The 19th century witnessed a transformation in the
understanding of the origins of criminal behavior in
the United States. For many, a religious emphasis on
humankind as sinful gave way to a belief in its inherent goodness. But if humans were naturally good,
how could their evil actions be explained? Drawing
on studies done here and abroad, American doctors,
preachers, and lawyers debated whether environment, heredity, or free will determined the actions
of the criminal. By the early 20th century, lawyers
and doctors had largely succeeded in medicalizing
criminality. Psychiatrists treated criminals as patients;
judges invoked hereditary eugenics in sentencing
criminals. Science, not sin, had apparently become
the preferred mode of explanation for the origins of
crime. But was this a better explanation than what
had come before? Discussion will be the primary
form of instruction.
HIST 40680. Jacksonian America
(3-0-3)
This course explores the early 19th-century history
of the United States, from the close of the War of
1812 to the coming of the Civil War (1815–48).
Although the era and course take their name from
President Andrew Jackson, we will cover much
more than national politics and affairs of state. We
will explore the birth of mass political parties, conflicts between nationalism and sectionalism, early
industrialization and the rise of class conflict, the
development of slavery and antislavery, changing
gender roles and the rise of feminism, evangelical
religion and reform, and Native American resistance
and removal.
HIST 40851. African-American Civil Rights
Movement
(3-0-3)
There may not be a term in American society as recognized, and yet as misunderstood, as “Civil Rights.”
Often civil rights are conflated with human rights,
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history
even through each are distinct of the other. During
the semester, we will trace the African-American
Civil Rights Movement in the United States during
the 20th century, as well as its lasting impact on
American society. We will do so using as many media
as possible. Fortunately, we will have the opportunity
to study an important part of American history in
significant detail. The time span we cover will not be
that great, but the issues we investigate challenge the
founding principles of American society to its core.
HIST 40853. The US and the Vietnam War
(3-0-3)
This course examines the participation of the United
States in its “longest war”—the conflict in Vietnam.
The course is taught primarily from an “American”
as opposed to a “Vietnamese” perspective. Broad
topics to be covered include: Vietnamese background
(land, people, history, culture); American Political
and Diplomatic Decision Making; 1950–75: How
the War was Fought; Debating the War; The War at
Home; The Aftermath of War; and Lessons of the
War. This is a lecture AND a discussion course. Attendance at BOTH is required. Approximately six
books will be assigned.
HIST 40855. Labor Movements in TwentiethCentury US
(3-0-3)
This course explores American workers’ collective efforts as workers in their search for economic security,
political power, and social and cultural autonomy
from the 1890s to the near present. For the most
part, this course will focus on the unions and related
organizations forged by workers throughout the
past century—from major umbrella groups like the
American Federation of Labor, the Industrial Workers of the World, and the Congress of Industrial
Organizations, to important sectoral actors like the
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the United
Automobile Workers, the American Federation of
Teachers, and the United Farm Workers. The central questions of the course will be: When, where,
and why have U.S. workers organized collectively
in the 20th century-and how successful have they
been? What has been the response of employers,
the government, and the public at large to these
collective efforts of workers, and how and why have
those responses changed over time? What has been
the relationship between organized labor and racial
and gender discrimination, as well as the causes of
racial and gender equality? And how have Americans
generally, and workers in particular, understood the
labor movement in relation to capitalism, freedom,
and democracy? Students will be expected to write
several short papers, engage in regular classroom discussion, and screen several films outside of class.
HIST 40887. Material America: Creating,
Collecting, Consuming
(3-0-3)
A seminar exploring how historians, archaeologists,
art historians, folklorists, geographers, and cultural
anthropologists use material culture as important
evidence in interpreting the American historical and
contemporary experience. Research fieldwork in area
museums and historical agencies such as the Snite
Museum, the Northern Indiana Center For History,
National Studebaker Museum, and Copshaholm/
Oliver Mansion will be part of the seminar.
Presidents and the presidency that are embodied in
films and television programs.
HIST 40888. Building America
(3-0-3) Beatty
The difference between rich and poor nations is not,
as Ernest Hemingway once said, that the rich have
more money than the poor, but is in part because the
rich produce more goods and services. Industrialization, in other words, has often brought wealth (as
well as social dislocation and protest) to those who
have succeeded. This course examines the process
of industrialization from a comparative perspective
and integrates the history of industrialization and its
social consequences for Western Europe (Britain and
Germany), the United States, Latin America (Mexico), and East Asia (Japan and South Korea). We
will concentrate on these countries’ transition from
agriculture-based societies to industrial societies. We
will analyze the process of industrialization on two
levels from above the role of political authority and
from below a view of factory life, industrial relations,
and protest from the perspective of workers and the
working classes. No specific prerequisites in history
or economics are necessary.
(3-0-3)
A seminar designed to examine the social and
economic factors, energy and land use policies,
demographic urban/suburban trends, technological
innovations and artistic impulses that have produced the American built environment, 1740 to
1940. Comparing several building types the private
residence, the workplace, and the public building
the seminar will explore structures and spaces as
material culture evidence of American domestic, real
estate, political, and cultural history. Attention will
be paid to high-style and vernacular architecture,
new building forms (skyscrapers, highway buildings, department stores) as well as work sites such as
mills, factories, and commercial buildings, plus four
American world fairs.
HIST 40890. Nature in America
(3-0-3)
This is a seminar designed to explore the concept of
nature in the American historical and contemporary
experience within an interdisciplinary context of art,
history, literature, and ecology. In addition to weekly
reading discussions, the seminar will meet, on a
number of occasions, at several nature sights: Morris
Conservatory and Muessel-Ellison Tropical Gardens;
Potawatomi Zoo; Elkhart Environmental Center;
Shiojiri Niwa Japanese Garden; Fernwood Botanical
Garden and Nature Preserve; University of Notre
Dame Grene-Nieuwland Herbarium. Purpose: To
study nature in American art (painting, photography,
sculpture), seminar meetings will be held at the Snite
Museum of Art, South Bend Regional Museum of
Art, and the Midwest Museum of American Art.
HIST 40891. Race, Gender, and Women of
Color
(3-0-3)
This seminar analyses dominant American beliefs
about the significance of race and gender primarily through the focusing lens of the experiences of
women of color in the US. How did intersecting
ideologies of race and gender attempt to define and
limit the lives of women of color as well as other
American? How have women of color responded
to and reinterpreted white American ideas about
their identity to develop their own self-defenses and
ideologies?
HIST 40896. Presidency in American Culture
(3-0-3)
This course examines the interactions among journalists, media companies, and Presidents in the United States since the Great Depression. Throughout
the term, we will emphasize several general principles
or trends. We will explore how new forms of technology have triggered changes in political practice,
a trend that becomes clear when we analyze the role
the Internet has taken in this year’s campaign. During the semester we will look at representations of
HIST 40950. Global Development in Historical
Perspective
HIST 40951. Technology and Development in
History
(3-0-3)
Technologies are often seen as either the product of
human genius and achievement, or as an alienating,
inhuman, and sometimes destructive force. Both
perspectives argue that technological change has
been one of the most important forces shaping world
history over recent centuries. This course examines
technological developments and theories of technological change in world history. It focuses on the relationship between new technologies, social change,
and economic development since 1750, surveying
cases from Britain, the United States, China, Japan,
and Latin America. We will pay special attention to
technology transfers: the movement of new machines
and processes and knowledge from one society to another, and the ways that social, cultural, and political
forces have shaped technological change in different
parts of the world.
HIST 40973. Archives and Empires: Inca/
Spaniards
(3-0-3)
Traditionally, scholars have highlighted the differences between the Inca empire and that of its Spanish conquerors. These differences are indeed striking,
and will be explored in this course. But there are
also similarities between the two imperial polities,
which we will likewise study. Attention will focus on
the production, collection, ordering, and storage of
information by both imperial and local authorities,
and on how this information was used. The Incas
recorded administrative and narrative information
on quipus (knotted cords) and with reference to
indigenous Andean languages. The Spanish in the
Andes briefly used this system before switching to
alphabetic writing and the Spanish language. Questions we will address include: did this change affect
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history
the kind of information that was preserved, and if so
how? And also, what role did culture and religion (as
documented in imperial records) play in the creation
and maintenance of imperial power?
HIST 40974. de las Casas:Context/Resonance
(3-0-3)
The Spanish conquest of Central and South America
generated a crisis of conscience in Spanish universities and in Spain at large. People wanted to know:
was the conquest justified, and if not, seeing that
it could not be undone, what were the invaders to
do? In this prolonged and often bitter debate, Bartolome de las Casas (1484–1566), Dominican friar
and bishop of Chiapa in Mexico, formulated what
still are among the most moving and intellectually
incisive arguments for the equality of all human beings. He also wrote one of the earliest comparative
histories of civilization (the Apologetica Historia). The
task of the course is to understand the thought of Las
Casas and his followers in its 16th-century context,
and then to enquire into the connections between
the ideas of Las Casas and contemporary theologians
of liberation, in particular Gustavo Gutierrez.
HIST 43075. Jerusalem
(3-0-3)
This research seminar provides an in-depth examination of the city of Jerusalem and its diverse historical
experiences from the rise of Islam to the present (ca.
600–2000). Although the instructor will provide
background information and feedback, this course
is primarily student-driven: you will lead portions
of discussions, present your research, and constructively critique the work of your peers. In addition
to certain common readings, discussions will center
on certain “hot topics” in the historical image of
Jerusalem. Students will be assigned specific, usually
“classic” studies of the topic at hand. Specific topics
include the meaning of the Dome of the Rock; pilgrimage; the origin(s) of the Crusades; cross-cultural
notions of sanctity; the Ottoman context, and the
divided city. Rather than a simple chronological “biography” of a city, this course will provide a nuanced
introduction to one of the most enduring symbols in
Western, Jewish, and Islamic civilization.
HIST 43130. Occupation of Japan
(3-0-3)
After years of fierce fighting in the Pacific, the victorious Allies occupied Japan from August 1945 until
1952. The “Basic Initial Post-Surrender Directive”
charged military occupiers and their civilian auxiliaries with democratizing the former enemy empire.
This course examines three aspects of this effort,
namely the political, economic, and cultural restructuring of Japan. We will explore the goals, methods,
and mix-ups of the (mostly) American attempt to
recast Japanese society in a democratic mold and the
Japanese response. The Big Question—one that we
will return to again and again in our discussions—is
what is democracy and how is it created and
sustained?
HIST 43250. Seminar: Travel in the Middle
Ages and Beyond
(3-0-3)
Many familiar events (from Exodus, to the voyages
of Columbus, the Crusades, or the American Gold
Rush) can be seen as examples of travel in history.
This seminar will examine the phenomenon of
travel, and will look at different types of travelers,
including soldiers, pilgrims, explorers, missionaries,
adventurers, and merchants. We will concentrate on
the medieval period (500–1500 CE), but will also
consider travel in other periods. The chronological
scope of the course will be broad in order to trace
changing perceptions of the world from the early
Middle Ages up through the voyages of Marco
Polo and Christopher Columbus. We will read the
writings of Christian, Jewish, and Muslim travelers, and will discuss the differing motives, interests,
and concerns of these itinerant men and women.
We will also discuss the evolution of cartography,
and shifting views of the world as revealed in early
maps. The course will cover the technical aspects of
medieval travel, with a discussion of roads, bridges,
inns, overland transport, and shipping. We will also
consider less physical aspects of travel and the ways
in which medieval writers employed the metaphor of
travel in different genres of literature such as the epic
quest and accounts of spiritual journeys. Students
will write a research paper based on primary sources
broadly concerned with issues of travel in a historical
period of their choice.
HIST 43252. Heretics and Friars, Mystics and
Nuns
(3-0-3)
From about 1100 until about 1400, European society witnessed wave after wave of new religious movements. These energies yielded groups and teachers of
all stripes, men and women regarded as heretics and
as saints. This course will treat the most important
of these, from the Cistercian monks who rejected
the established ways of their fellow Benedictines
around 1100, to Francis of Assisi’s lay penitents and
preachers, to suspect beguines in the Lowlands and
the Rhineland mystics. The emphasis will fall upon
studying texts from these religious teachers and actors that will help us get at the aspirations of these
new religious, while setting them in their social and
cultural environments.
HIST 43350. Seminar: In the Heart of the
Archive
(3-0-3)
This course reviews the cultural politics of archives
from their emergence in Mesopotamia, their function in the Greek polis, the emergence of archival
bureaucracies in 12th—century Europe, the archivoclasm of the Reformation, and then the fabrication
of “national” archives in Imperial Europe of the 19th
century. We will then consider the debates over digital archives. Each student will pick a major archive
and consider its formation and cultural logic.
HIST 43410. Seminar: Victorian Revolution in
Government
(3-0-3)
Prior to the 19th century, government—particularly
in the British Isles—was expected to be minimal,
occasional, amateur, (and cheap), concerned only
with maintaining property and religion, and, when
unavoidable, with the defense of the realm. Modern
governments (including the British) are large, permanent, professional (and costly) complex bureaucracies, concerned with how much you can load on a
ship, what colors you can put in margarine, what
you must learn in school, and with the regulation
of the economy; the welfare of all citizens; and the
quality of the environment, social and natural. We
know that this revolutionary change in government
happened during the 19th century, primarily in
response to the great social changes of urbanization
and industrialization, but historians disagree as to
how it came about. Early in the semester, our meetings will be devoted to a critical reading of the state
of the historical literature on this question; in the
middle we will be learning to use the archives; and
toward the end we will be meeting together to discuss our interpretations of the evidence. This seminar will meet the research seminar requirement for
history majors, who have priority in enrollment. The
seminar is also recommended to any student with an
interest in public service or public policy.
HIST 43470. Seminar: The Russian Revolution
(3-0-3)
This research seminar is designed to familiarize history majors with main categories of primary sources
(e.g., official documents, diaries, memoirs, correspondence), major historical interpretations, and
historical method through study of selected events
of the Russian Revolution. Students are expected to
write a major research paper.
HIST 43550. Seminar: The Cold War
(3-0-3)
This course will address the individuals and issues
involved in the emergence and development of the
Cold War from its World War II beginnings to its
postwar development. Stress will be placed on the
origins of the Cold War but topics that have a major
bearing on its later development will be considered.
Students will be graded on their classroom participation (25 percent), short classroom presentations (25
percent), and on their final term paper (50 percent).
While emphasis will be placed on the European/
Russian role in the Cold War, the role of Americans
will naturally be included. Students will be required
to seek out original documents such as memoirs
and printed archival sources, when not hindered by
language obstacles. Of course, some original sources
involving major individuals and issues have been
translated into English.
HIST 43552. Seminar: Nationalism in Europe
(3-0-3)
This course will begin with several joint sessions devoted to an examination of the role nationalism has
played in shaping modern European history. Given
the broad nature of the course, emphasis will be
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history
placed on the theoretical underpinnings of nationalism, and on how national mythology influences historiography. The second portion of the course offers
students an opportunity to conduct research on topics approved by the instructor. Research can focus on
any European national experience in either the 19th
or the 20th century. The instructor will consider
topics touching on any aspect of diplomatic, social,
religious, intellectual, or political history as long as
the inquiry helps to enlarge our understanding of
European nationalism. Students will be expected to
present the results of their research at the end of the
semester. Course requirements include submission
of a bibliography, a thesis statement, a first draft,
and a 25-page research paper at the end of the term.
No prior knowledge of European history is required,
though some basic knowledge of historical events
will provide a firmer foundation to select a research
topic. Students with even a rudimentary knowledge
of a European foreign language will be expected
to test their linguistic abilities in the final research
project.
HIST 43553. Republicanism
(3-0-3)
“Republicanism” refers principally, but not exclusively, to republican ideas in the English-speaking Atlantic world in the period 1600 to 1800. After looking
briefly at republican ideology in the ancient world
and in renaissance Europe, the seminar will move to
the substance of the course: the English “classical” republicans of the 17th century, such as Marchamont
Nedham, John Milton, and James Harrington; the
transmission of their ideas to 18th-century America;
and, finally, the particular version of republicanism
as it developed in Ireland in the same period. This
seminar course is discussion-based. Members of the
seminar are expected to research topics, which will at
first be stipulated by the instructor, and will subsequently be of the student’s own choice. Students will
present the findings of their research as the basis for
leading a class discussion. The semester’s work will
conclude with a 20-page essay on a subject negotiated between the student and the instructor.
HIST 43554. Seminar: Turn-of-the Century
Europe
(3-0-3)
This seminar will deal with the social and cultural
history of Europe from about 1880 to 1914. Since
only a few of you will be able to read the foreign
language necessary for your topic, you can concentrate instead on other means to research your topic.
For example, by interpreting music or art works or
reading literature in translation, it will be possible
to accumulate sufficient evidence to deal with issues
that come up during your research.
HIST 43555. Europe in the Nazi Era
(3-0-3)
This research seminar will address issues related to
the rise, expansion, and defeat of Nazism between
1933 and 1945. Although Germany occupies a
central place in this history, we will focus on the
Europe-wide impacts of Nazi ideas and aggression.
Students will read and discuss key works in the field
dealing with topics such as Hitler’s rise to power, European diplomacy in the 1930s; the course of World
War II; Nazi occupation practices; the Holocaust
and other programs of mass killing; women and the
war effort; popular consensus, collaboration, and
resistance; and the immediate postwar period. At the
same time, each student will write a major research
paper, based on primary sources, that explores in
depth some aspect of this crucial period of European
history. Class time will be divided approximately
equally between discussing common readings and
developing the skills necessary to produce a research
paper.
primary and secondary sources concerning the following topics: immigrant and ethnic Catholicism;
the experience of Catholic women, especially women
religious; Catholic devotional life; Catholic social
movements; and the relationship between Catholics
and the broader American society. We will explore
some of the major historical interpretations of the
Catholic experience, and become familiar with methods of historical research. During the second half of
the semester, students will work independently (in
consultation with the instructor) to prepare their
research papers. At the end of the semester, they will
share their findings with other participants in the
seminar through an oral presentation.
HIST 43557. Seminar: Modern European
Revolutions
HIST 43613. Seminar: US Legal History
(3-0-3)Lyandres
This research seminar is designed to familiarize history majors with main categories of primary and secondary sources, major historical interpretations, and
historical method through study of selected events
and personalities of Modern European Revolutions,
including the Russian Revolutions of 1905, 1917,
and 1991; Eastern European Revolutions of 1989;
the Orange Revolution in Kiev in November and
December 2004 (as well as the Velvet Revolution in
Tbilisi in the fall of 2003). Students are required to
write a major research paper based largely on primary sources.
HIST 43610. Notre Dame History
(3-0-3)
This seminar will offer the student the opportunity
to research an aspect of Notre Dame history of his
or her particular interest-academic program, student
life, administrative decision, etc. Research topics
might include Father Sorin’s rebuilding of the Main
Building after the fire of 1879, priest-chaplains serving in the Civil War, Notre Dame during World War
I or World War II, Rev. Julius Nieuwland, CSC,
and the discovery of synthetic rubber, Notre Dame’s
Minims Department (grade school), Notre Dame’s
Preparatory School (high school), Notre Dame’s
Manual Labor School, Immigrant Scholars on the
Notre Dame faculty in the 1930s, Holy Cross Religious as Japanese Prisoners of War in World War II,
the inauguration of the Great Books Program, Rev.
John J. Cavanaugh, CSC, and the Kennedy Family,
Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, CSC and the Civil Rights
Commission, etc. After some introductory readings
on the history of the University, the principal work
of the course will be the research, in primary and
secondary sources, and the writing of a paper of
approximately 30 pages, and a presentation of the
paper for class discussion.
HIST 43612. Seminar: US Catholic History
(3-0-3)
This seminar is designed with two goals in mind: to
introduce students to the major events and themes
in the history of American Catholicism, and to help
students organize, research, and write an original
work of historical scholarship. During the first half
of the semester, we will read and discuss a variety of
(3-0-3)
This course examines the role of law in the history of
the United States from its origins as a British colony
to the late 20th century. It looks at law not only as
a functional response to social transformation, but
also as both a powerful force shaping daily life and as
a key component of American political mythology.
The course will examine constitutional, common,
and statute laws, as well as legal culture and institutions. Key subjects include the market revolution,
slavery, the Civil War amendments, laissez-faire
constitutionalism, legal realism, the New Deal, and
civil rights. This course combines lecture and discussion. To that end, the instructor will pick three to
five students each week to be responsible for the
reading, and will call on those students during class.
Each student will be on-call at least twice during
the semester, it is advisable for you to read for every
session, as it will be difficult to follow the lecture
without adequate preparation.
HIST 43614. Seminar: The Religious Factor in
American History
(3-0-3) Marsden
A research seminar surveying how religion has interacted with American culture, including thought,
moral values, social views, education, and politics.
Students will write a research paper on a topic of
their choice.
HIST 43651. Women and Gender in the United
States, 1929–84
(3-0-3)
This research seminar will cover changing gender relations in the US between the Great Depression and
the end of the Reagan era. Students will read and
discuss recent books and articles covering a variety
of topics which may include: gender relations during
the Great Depression; whether WWII was a turning
point for women’s work; the feminine mystique;
women in the Civil Rights movement; the women’s
liberation movement of the 1960s and 1970s;
changes in masculinities and their relation (or lack
of relation) to the women’s movement; the gay rights
movement; and changes in women’s work force participation and family life. During the latter half of
the semester, students will concentrate on producing
a substantial paper, based on original primary source
research, on a topic of their choice selected in consultation with the instructor.
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history
HIST 43652. Seminar: US Thought, Belief,
Value
(3-0-3)
A research seminar surveying early America’s most
characteristic intellectual, moral, and religious outlooks. The course will provide a broad introduction
to topics such as the religious foundations of influential Americans groups such as Puritans in New
England and Quakers in Pennsylvania, the European
origins of American beliefs, the Enlightenment of
the 18th century, the origins of American political
thought, the impact of evangelicalism on the new
republic, romanticism and Transcendentalism, the
role of science, anti-slavery and other reform thought
before the Civil War, the South, and the ideological
and moral issues of the Civil War. The course will include consideration of the outlooks of some of early
America’s greatest thinkers and writers. Students will
write a research paper on a specific person or topic in
one of these areas.
HIST 43750. Seminar: United States in the
Twentieth Century
(3-0-3) Blantz
The purpose of this course is twofold. First, it should
permit the student to gain a greater familiarity with
several of the major topics in 20th-century American
history—the Progressive Period of Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson; the Wall Street Crash
of 1929 and the Great Depression; the New Deal
legislation of Franklin Roosevelt; World Wars I and
II; the Cold War; the Fair Deal Program of Harry
Truman; Dwight Eisenhower’s Modern Republicanism; John Kennedy’s New Frontier; the Great Society
of Lyndon Johnson; the Civil Rights Movement and
the Feminist Movement; Richard Nixon and Watergate; aspects of 20th-century American culture; and
the presidency of Ronald Reagan. Second, and more
importantly, the course will offer each student the
opportunity to research and produce a major paper
on a topic of his or her own choosing in 20thcentury American history. Approximately one-fourth
of the semester will be devoted to reading and discussion of several of the above topics, and the rest
of the semester to research and writing the seminar
paper. The papers will be summarized for class discussion in the last four meetings of the semester.
HIST 43751. Seminar: Religion and Politics in
Twentieth-Century US
(3-0-3)
This course will examine the relationship between
religion and political violence in the 20th century,
focusing on the United States in comparative perspective. The course will be divided into three parts;
students may write their seminar paper on a topic
in any one of these three thematic areas. Part one
will examine the writings and cultural influence
of major thinkers in the U.S. Protestant, Catholic,
and Jewish communities who addressed the questions of war, peace, and America’s role in the world
(e.g., Reinhold Niebuhr, Thomas Merton, Abraham
Joshua Heschel, John Courtney Murray, SJ). The
second part will examine cases of religiously inspired
violence in the United States (e.g., the Ku Klux
Klan, the militias, and Oklahoma City), Egypt, Iran,
Palestine/Israel, Lebanon, and India in the 20th
century. The third part will examine the concept of
“American exceptionalism” and whether, to what
extent, and why it applies to the question of religious
violence. Each student will be required to write brief
reviews of weekly assignments during the first part
of the semester and to prepare a seminar paper, to be
presented at later meetings.
HIST 43753. Seminar: Urban Oral Histories
(3-0-3)
For years, historians rejected oral sources, claiming that they were unverifiable utterances from
respondents who were often equally unreliable. In
the recent past, however, oral history has become an
accepted form of research and a staple of certain historical fields. In the seminar, participants will devise,
construct, and implement an urban history research
project that draws extensively on oral sources. We
will examine the methodology, practices, and pitfalls
of oral history in classroom discussion and secondary
sources.
HIST 43754. Seminar: African-American Civil
Rights in the US
(3-0-3)
The primary goals of the class are to introduce the
participants to the major scholarly works and developments related to African-American civil rights and
to facilitate the development of a research strategy
for the production of an article-length scholarly
treatment of a selected aspect of civil rights history.
Projects should reflect the evolving interpretive synthesis of the history of the Civil Rights Movement
and its relationship to the major social, political,
economic, and cultural trends of the 20th century.
Students may also examine the ways in which the
history and achievements of the Civil Rights Movement have been represented and interpreted.
HIST 43900. Latin American Independence
Movements
(3-0-3)
This seminar focuses on the breakdown of the Spanish empire in Latin America, and the emergence of
new nation-states in the region in the first quarter of
the 19th century. Contrary to common expectations,
the former colonies did not form a united nation but
rather split into 10 different republics that developed
their own unique histories, only to split further
apart during the course of the century. This seminar
examines the origins and actors of the independence
movements, the development of an ideology of
emancipation, and the variegated causes of fragmentation. The first third of the seminar is devoted to
a common set of readings on Latin American independence. Students choose, in consultation with the
professor, a specific topic of research. Students will
work on primary source material, develop a thesis,
and present their results in class for comment and
discussion. At the end of the semester, students will
submit a 25-page seminar paper.
HIST 43901. Seminar: Coffee/Sugar/Other
Goods
(3-0-3)
Between their origin in the earth and their ultimate
destination in our bodies, coffee, sugar, and other
addictive commodities (such as tobacco, cacao, tea,
opium, cocaine, and perhaps oil) have had profound
effects on world history. In all cases, their production, processing, distribution, and consumption have
been intertwined with the historical development of
individuals, peoples, nations, and international relations. Growing consumption has profoundly altered
the social, economic, and environmental history
of producing countries, with especially profound
impact on those individuals whose labor brings them
from the earth. And in all cases, most of the world’s
supply of such commodities comes from relatively
poor regions while consumption is centered in the
relatively wealthy, industrialized nations.
The course introduces students to the broad outlines
of the history of comparative commodities though
class readings and discussions. Students will then
conduct research on an approved topic related to
a specific commodity or theme that examines one
aspect of the role of a commodity in world history.
Course requirements include the submission of a
bibliography, a thesis statement, a first draft, and a
25-page research paper.
HIST 53001. Honors Methodology
(3-0-3)
This course is open only to students in the Department of History honors program. It has two agendas:
(1) to introduce students to theoretical and practical
foundations of historical method; and (2) to help get
you started on your honors research. During the first
half of the semester, we will discuss and practice key
aspects of historical method, providing a structure
for you to start your own research. You will work
on multiple drafts of a research proposal, develop
a bibliography, and begin your research in primary
sources. By the end of the semester, you should be
close to completing your research and beginning to
write the first draft of your honors essay. This course
will try to assist you in planning and budgeting your
time toward the goal of minimizing the stress and
maximizing the intellectual rewards of participating
in the honors program.
HIST 53002. Honors Colloquium
(3-0-3) Bederman
This course, designed for students in the honors
program in the History Department, will introduce
students to the ways in which history is conceptualized, written, and argued about. Students will
approach these issues through a study of France, focusing on three topics that have generated important
and exciting debates among historians: the French
Revolution; World War II and the Vichy regime;
and colonialism and decolonization. Students will
approach these topics by reading and discussing both
classic texts and recent works. At the end of the semester students will have the opportunity to pursue
the historiographical debates that emerge from their
honors thesis.
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mathematics
HIST 58003. Honors Thesis
(3-0-3)
History Honors Program students only. In the fall
and spring of the senior year, the history honors
student will work on a thesis (up to 50 pages) under
the supervision of a specific faculty member. This directed writing course will satisfy the seminar requirement (HIST 43750 or 43753) of the major and will
be written within the student’s field of concentration.
HIST 56050. Directed Readings
(0-0-V)
Independent study of special topics under the direction of a faculty member. Agreement by the faculty
member and approval by the director of graduate
studies required. (Annual).
Mathematics
Chair:
Bill Dwyer
Associate Chair:
Alex A. Himonas
Director of Graduate Studies:
Julia Knight
Director of Undergraduate Studies:
Matt Gursky
William J. Hank Family Professor of Mathematics:
William G. Dwyer
Charles L. Huisking Professor of Mathematics:
Julia F. Knight
John and Margaret McAndrews Professor of
Mathematics:
Francois Ledrappier
Vincent J. Duncan and Annamarie Micus Duncan
Professor of Mathematics:
Andrew Sommese
Notre Dame Professor of Applied Mathematics:
Joachim J. Rosenthal
John A. Zahm, CSC, Professor of Mathematics
Stephen A. Stolz
Professors:
Mark S. Alber; Steven A. Buechler; Jianguo
Cao; Peter A. Cholak; Francis X. Connolly;
Leonid Faybusovich; Matthew Gursky;
Alexander J. Hahn; Qing Han; Alex A.
Himonas; Alan Howard (emeritus); Bei Hu;
Juan Migliore; Timothy O’Meara (Kenna
Professor of Mathematics, emeritus, and provost emeritus); Richard R. Otter (emeritus);
Barth Pollak (emeritus); Mei-Chi Shaw; Brian
Smyth; Dennis M. Snow; Nancy K. Stanton;
Wilhelm Stoll (Duncan Professor of Mathematics, emeritus); Laurence R. Taylor; E.
Bruce Williams; Pit-Mann Wong; Warren J.
Wong (emeritus); Frederico Xavier
Associate Professors:
Mario Borelli (emeritus); John E. Derwent
(emeritus); Jeffrey A. Diller; Matthew J. Dyer;
Samuel R. Evens; Michael Gekhtman;
Abraham Goetz (emeritus); Brian C. Hall;
Xiabo Liu; Cecil B. Mast (emeritus); Gerard
K. Misiolek; Liviu Nicolaescu; Claudia Polini;
Sergei Starchenko; Vladeta Vuckovic
(emeritus)
Assistant Professors:
Katrina D. Barron; Richard Hind; David P.
Nicholls
Program of Studies. Students in the College of Arts
and Letters may pursue a major in mathematics
with a concentration in honors. (Note that this
program should not be confused with the Arts and
Letters/Science Honors program and that several
concentrations, including Honors, are available with
a major in mathematics in the College of Science.)
The mathematics major in arts and letters aims to
give the student a thorough liberal intellectual discipline and to furnish an adequate background for
other fields of study. At the same time it prepares the
student for graduate work in mathematics, and many
of those who have taken the program have entered
graduate schools in that field. Others have entered
philosophy, medicine, law, economics and industrial
management.
Students intending to follow this major in the College of Arts and Letters must declare their intention
to the advisor indicated by the mathematics department and the dean of arts and letters at advance
registration in the spring of their freshman year.
Students must have completed or be completing satisfactory work in MATH 165 and 166. The program
of their studies is subject in its entirety to approval
by the advisor.
Students whose first major is in the College of Arts
and Letters may also pursue a second major in mathematics. See “Mathematics As a Second Major” in
the College of Science section of this Bulletin.
The Program of Courses
First Year
First Semester
English
History or Social Science
MATH 12850. Honors Calculus I
Natural Science
Language: (French, German or
Russian recommended)
Physical Education 3
3
4
3
3
—
——— 16
Second Semester
Language: French, German or Russian
3
University Seminar
3
MATH 10860. Honors Calculus II
4
Natural Science
3
Electives
3
Physical Education
—
———
16
Sophomore Year
First Semester
Core Course
3
Language: French, German or Russian
3
Fine Arts Elective
3
MATH 20810. Honors Algebra I
3
MATH 20850. Honors Calculus III
4
———
16
Second Semester
Introduction to Philosophy
Core Course
Theology
MATH 20820. Honors Algebra II
MATH 20850. Honors Calculus IV
3
3
3
3
4
———
16
177
medieval studies
Medieval Studies
Junior Year
First Semester
Theology
MATH 30810. Honors Algebra III
MATH 30850. Honors Analysis I
Elective
History or Social Science
3
3
3
5
3
———
17
Second Semester
Philosophy
MATH 30820. Honors Algebra IV
MATH 30860. Honors Analysis II
English/American Literature
Elective
3
3
3
3
3
———
15
Senior Year
First Semester
Mathematics Electives
Electives
6
9
———
15
Second Semester
Mathematics Electives
Electives
6
9
———
15
(At least six credits of mathematics electives must be
at the 40000 level.)
Course Descriptions. See “Mathematics” in the College of Science section of this Bulletin.
Robert M. Conway Director of the Medieval Institute:
Thomas F.X. Noble (history)
Director of Undergraduate Studies:
Linda Major
Fellows and Associated Faculty of the Medieval Institute
Asma Afsaruddin (Classics: Arabic); Joseph
P. Amar (Classics: Arabic); Charles E. Barber
(art history); Terri Bays (English); Alexander
Blachly (music); W. Martin Bloomer (Classics:
Latin); Joseph Bobik (philosophy); D’Arcy
Jonathan Dacre Boulton (history); Maureen
McCann Boulton (Romance languages:
French); Calvin M. Bower (music); Keith R.
Bradley (classics: Roman history); Rev. David
B. Burrell, CSC (philosophy); Theodore J.
Cachey (Romance languages: Italian); John C.
Cavadini (theology); Paul M. Cobb (history);
Robert R. Coleman (art history); Olivia Remie
Constable (history); Lawrence S. Cunningham
(theology); Rev. Brian E. Daley, SJ (theology); JoAnn DellaNeva (Romance languages:
French); Rev. Michael S. Driscoll, SJ (theology); Stephen D. Dumont (philosophy); Kent
Emery Jr. (liberal studies; philosophy); Alfred
Freddoso (philosophy); Dolores Warwick Frese
(English); Stephen E. Gersh (philosophy);
Robert Goulding (history); Brad S. Gregory
(history); Li Guo (Classics: Arabic); Susanne
Hafner (Mellon Fellow); Peter Holland (theater); David Jenkins (librarian); Rev. John
I. Jenkins, CSC (philosophy); Louis Jordan
(librarian); Encarnación Juárez (Romance
languages: Spanish); Kathryn Kerby-Fulton
(English); Mary M. Keys (political science);
Brian Krostenko (Classics: Latin); Blake
Leyerle (theology); Sabine MacCormack
(English); Julia Marvin (liberal studies);
Ralph M. McInerny (philosophy); Margaret
Meserve (history); Christian R. Moevs (Romance languages: Italian); David O’Connor
(philosophy); Katherine O’Brien O’Keeffe
(English); Mark C. Pilkinton (theater); Jean
Porter (philosophy); Thomas J. Prügl (theology); Gretchen Reydams-Schils (liberal studies;
philosophy); Gabriel Said Reynolds (theology);
Robert E. Rodes (law); John Roos (political
science); Charles M. Rosenberg (art history);
Dayle Seidenspinner-Núñez (Romance languages; Spanish); Daniel J. Sheerin (Classics:
Latin); Susan Guise Sheridan (anthropology;
archaeology); Rabbi Michael A. Signer (theology); Marina Smyth (librarian); John Van Engen (history); Joseph P. Wawrykow (theology);
Albert K. Wimmer (German); Robin Darling
Young (theology)
The Medieval Institute Undergraduate
Programs
The liberal arts were first cultivated as a university
curriculum during the Middle Ages; thus, the undergraduate programs in the Medieval Institute offer an
ideal context in which to pursue them in the modern
world. Medieval Studies foster close reading, precise
textual analysis, careful writing, and vigorous discussion. Medieval Studies therefore provide not only a
solid foundation for graduate study, but also—and
even more significantly—a superb liberal arts education relevant to a wide variety of personal and
professional goals. The objective of undergraduate
programs in the Medieval Institute is to introduce
students to medieval culture and to the disciplinary
and interdisciplinary skills necessary for the serious
pursuit of the liberal arts in general and medieval
studies in particular.
Undergraduate studies in the Medieval Institute may
follow one of three tracks:
1. The Major in Medieval Studies
2. The Supplementary Major
3. The Minor in Medieval Studies
All three of these programs enable students to take
a wide variety of courses focused on the intellectual,
cultural, and religious heritage of the medieval
world. Students have access to the resources of the
collection and staff of the library that forms the core
of the Medieval Institute, located on the seventh
floor of the Hesburgh Library; they also are encouraged to participate in the intellectual life of the Medieval Institute, particularly to attend the institute’s
lecture series and to engage in discussion with guest
scholars, faculty members, and graduate students, as
well as undergraduate colleagues. Undergraduates in
the institute compete for the Michel Prize, awarded
to an outstanding paper written by an undergraduate
on a medieval topic, and participate in the unique
graduation ceremony sponsored by the institute.
1. The Major in Medieval Studies
Students wishing to major in Medieval Studies
build their program of studies from courses offered by the 10 departments that participate in the
interdisciplinary program of the Medieval Institute:
(1) Anthropology; (2) Art, Art History, and Design
(art history); (3) Classics (Latin); (4) English (Old
and Middle English); (5) German and Russian (Old
and Middle High German); (6) History; (7) Music
(musicology); (8) Philosophy; (9) Romance Languages and Literatures (Old and Middle French, Old
Provençal, Spanish, and Italian); and (10) Theology.
While students are encouraged to explore various
directions in all these departments, the fundamental
requirements for the major in Medieval Studies are
as follows.
A. Two semesters of a language appropriate to
Medieval Studies 6 or 0 credits
Two semesters of a language appropriate to Medieval
Studies forms a prerequisite for any major. Normally,
Latin will form the language component in the
program, but the student is encouraged to study
Greek, Hebrew, or Arabic if his or her interest lies in
Eastern Europe or in Arabic culture. Syriac may be
taken if the student has a strong interest in Eastern
liturgies and patristic studies. If the student counts
two semesters of Latin, for example, as the college requirement, the prerequisite is fulfilled, but the credit
does not apply to the major; if, on the other hand,
the student uses another language to meet the college
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requirement, two semesters of Latin may be added to
the major. Courses in an appropriate language above
300 may be counted below in G.
B. Both courses from the Medieval History
sequence (30203 and 30204)
6 credits
C. An interdisciplinary course
3 credits
Normally, this course should be one offered within
the Medieval Institute.
D. One course in Medieval Art History, Music
History, or Vernacular Literature
3 credits
E. One course in Medieval Philosophy or
Theology 3 credits
F. One advanced seminar (40000 level or above) in
Medieval Studies
3 credits
This course will be selected carefully in consultation
with the undergraduate advisor. The course normally
will be taken in an area in which the student has a
strong background and, in certain cases, even may be
a graduate-level seminar.
G. Four (or two) further courses in Medieval
Studies chosen from any of the participating
disciplines. 6 or 12 credits
These courses should be chosen in consultation
with the undergraduate advisor, so that they both
strengthen the student’s principal interests and
broaden the student’s background and disciplinary
skills. Upper-level courses in an additional foreign
language may fulfill this requirement. (Cf. requirement A: If Latin is counted for credit in the major,
two further courses meet this requirement.)
Total credits for major:
36
2. The Supplementary Major
Many students pursuing a major in one of the
departments that participate and contribute to the
broad mission of the Medieval Institute may wish to
supplement and strengthen their primary major with
a second major in Medieval Studies. The following
program is available to students as a supplementary
major.
A. Two semesters of a language appropriate to
Medieval Studies 6 or 0 credits
See qualifications stated above under major.
B. Both courses from the Medieval History sequence (30203 and 30204)
6 credits
C. An interdisciplinary course
3 credits
Normally, this course should be one offered within
the Medieval Institute.
D. One course in Medieval Art History, Music
History, or Vernacular Literature 3 credits
E. One course in Medieval Philosophy
or Theology
3 credits
F. One advanced seminar (40000 level
or above) in Medieval Studies
3 credits
This course will be selected carefully in consultation
with the undergraduate advisor. The course normally
will be taken in an area in which the student has a
strong background and, in certain cases, even may be
a graduate-level seminar.
G. Two further courses in Medieval Studies
chosen from any of the participating
disciplines 0 or 6 credits
These courses should be chosen in consultation
with the undergraduate advisor, so that they both
strengthen the primary field of interest and broaden
the student’s background and disciplinary skills. Upper-level courses in an additional foreign language
may fulfill this requirement.
Total credits for supplementary major: 30
3. The Medieval Studies Minor
The Minor in Medieval Studies allows students
who are also committed to other programs of study
to pursue their interests in medieval culture by
combining a focused group of courses treating the
Middle Ages with a Major and/or a Supplementary
Major in other departments.
Requirements:
Five courses treating aspects of the Middle Ages
distributed among three disciplines. Students are
encouraged to use at least one course offered in the
Medieval Institute itself as one of the “disciplines.”
While the minor has no specific language requirement, the student is encouraged to use courses in a
language to complete the minor. Minors are taken
seriously in the Medieval Institute and participate
fully in the graduation ceremony sponsored by the
institute. For further details, see the listing under
Minors.
Most courses in the major and minor programs are
drawn from participating departments, and full
course descriptions should be sought in the relevant
sections of the Bulletin. For additional information
on specific programs in the institute and availability
and sequence of courses, see the director of undergraduate studies.
Course Descriptions. The following list of courses
gives the number and title of each course. Lecture
hours per week, studio hours per week, and credits
each semester are in parentheses. The instructor’s
name is also included.
MI 13185. Philosophy University Seminar
(3-0-3) Gersh
The course is an introduction to Greek philosophy
with special reference to its two greatest figures: Plato
and Aristotle. Plato was the inventor or at least the
most articulate early exponent of many ideas that
subsequently became standard in western culture:
for example, the notions of absolute moral standards
and of the immortality of the human soul. Aristotle,
although critical of Plato in many respects, also continued his approach in such areas as the systematization of logical and scientific methods. Since both
Plato and Aristotle viewed the ability to distinguish
real truths from the realm of sophistry and illusion
as the distinguishing feature of the “philosopher,”
they continue to have great relevance in our modern
world dominated by media and commercialism.
During the course, students will read and discuss a
selection of works (or extracts) in English translation.
These will include Plato: Phaedo, Symposium, Republic, Sophist, Timaeus, and Aristotle: Physics, Metaphysics, On the Soul, Nicomachean Ethics.
MI 20275. Castles and Courts
(3-0-3)
Corequisite(s): HIST 22290
This course will examine the high period in the
history of the castle—a combination of fort and
residence—of the castellany or district subjected to
the domination of a castle, and of the household and
court of the kings, princes, and barons who built
such residences and organized their lives and their
activities within their various structures. It will first
consider the castle as a form of fortification, review
briefly the history of fortifications before 900, and
examine the ways in which lords and their builders steadily improved their defensive capabilities in
response to new knowledge and to new methods
and tools of siegecraft. It will then examine the relationship of the castle to the contemporary forms of
non-fortified or semi-fortified house, and finally its
relationship to the lordly household (the body of servants organized into numerous departments associated with particular rooms or wings of the castle) and
with the court (or body of soldiers, officers, allies,
students, and temporary guests) who filled the castle
when the lord was present. The course will conclude
with an examination of the history of the castellany
as a form of jurisdiction. The course will concentrate
on the castles of the British Isles and France, but will
examine the great variety of types found throughout
Latin Europe.
MI 20276. Introduction to Islamic Civilization
(3-0-3) Guo
This course provides an introduction to Islamic
civilization and Muslim culture and societies through
scholarly works, literature, media clips, films, and
audio-video material (some made by the instructor during recent trips to the Middle East). The
background reading will provide a context for the
audio-visual material, giving a general overview of
the history of the Islamic world from the advent of
Islam to the present day. The ultimate goal of this
course is for students to gain a better understanding
of the Muslim peoples and their culture and societies
within the broader context of Islamic civilization.
Focal point: brief overview of the canons and basic
tenets of Islam as a world religion, recognition and
transcendence of stereotypes, awareness of Western
Culture and political influence on today’s ArabIslamic world and vice versa, and exposure to Middle
Eastern culture.
MI 20277. Martyrs, Monks, and Crusaders
(3-0-3)
This course will survey the history of Christianity
from its status as a persecuted minority religion of
the Roman Empire to its position of dominance in
the civilizations of medieval Europe and Byzantium.
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In addition to examining major figures, institutions,
and ideas within the Christian movement, we will
consider the interplay between political, social, and
cultural factors and developments in the church. We
will pay special attention to the relationship between
Christianity and culture, the “losers” as well as the
“winners” in theological debates, Christian contacts
with Jews and Muslims, the roles of women in the
church, and the variety of spiritual traditions that
flourished in the Middle Ages. Reading, analysis, and
discussion of primary source documents from the
early and medieval church will be an important part
of the course.
MI 20278. King Arthur in History and Literature
(3-0-3)
This course—intended to introduce undergraduates to one of the major themes as well as to the
interdisciplinary approaches characteristic of Medieval Studies—is a team-taught examination of the
development and influence of the legend of Arthur,
King of Britain, both in history and in literature.
The historical Arthur is very obscure, but he was
probably a Romanized Celtic war-leader who fought
the invading Angles and Saxons at the beginning
of the history of what was to become England. His
memory was preserved in the oral literature of his
own people, now called the Welsh, but he was soon
converted into a mythic hero surrounded by magical companions. In the 12th century this legendary
Arthur was not only incorporated into the new historiography of England (since 1066 under the rule of
French-speaking Normans) but into the new genre
of literature created in France around 1150—the chivalric romance-that itself embodied a new ideal for
the relationship between men and women derived
from the songs of the troubadours of the south. The
great majority of these tales of love and marvelous
adventures written over the next four centuries were
to be set in the court of the legendary Arthur, and
the Round Table was invented in this period as the
central focus of the ideals it was made to represent.
History soon began to imitate literature, as kings and
princes attempted to emulate the idealized Arthurian
court in their tournaments and other court festivities, and from 1330 to 1469 actually founded orders
of knights based on the Round Table. The class will
read the relevant parts of some of the chronicles,
histories, and epics in which Arthur was mentioned,
as well as a representative sample of the Arthurian romances of the later period, and of related documents
like the statutes of the chivalric orders. Two in-class
tests, two short papers, and a final examination will
be required.
MI 20473. Regarding the Islamic Challenge to
Christian Theology
(3-0-3) Reynolds
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
While many Christians have described Islam as a
Christian heresy, many Muslims consider Christianity to be an Islamic heresy. Jesus, they maintain,
was a Muslim prophet. Like Adam and Abraham
before him, like Muhammad after him, he was sent
to preach Islam. In this view Islam is the natural
religion—eternal, universal, and unchanging. Other
religions, including Christianity, arose only when
people went astray. Therefore Muslims have long
challenged the legitimacy of Christian doctrines
that differ from Islam, including the Trinity, the
incarnation, the cross, and the new covenant and
the church. In this course we will examine Islamic
writings, from the Qur’an to contemporary texts, in
which these doctrines are challenged. We will then
examine the history of Christian responses to these
challenges and consider, as theologians, how Christians might approach them today.
MI 20702. Introduction to Art and Catholicism
(3-0-3) Barber
This undergraduate lecture/discussion course will
give students the opportunity to analyze and discuss
the history of Catholic doctrine as it pertains to the
visual arts. From the Council of Elvira in 306 AD
to John Paul II’s Letter to Artists of 1999 Catholicism has engaged with and debated the role of the
arts as a legitimate vehicle for spiritual experience
and theological knowledge. In this course, we will
examine the changing, complex, and various ideas
that have been brought to the question of the function of art in the Church. It will become clear that
Catholic attitudes to the arts have been subject to
a range of influences that have helped shape a still
fluid and potential relationship between Catholicism
and art. Among other topics we will examine the accommodation of traditional pagan practices in Late
Antiquity; the impact of Byzantine and Carolingian
theological discourse on the arts; Mendicant thought
and practice regarding the arts; lay piety in the Later
Middle Ages; issues raised by the Reformation; the
Council of Trent and the Counter-Reformation; the
implications of Modernism; neo-Thomist aesthetics;
and the aftermath of Vatican II. In all instances the
course will be shaped by the discussions of primary
readings (in translation when necessary) that will
set these texts in a context that is social, intellectual,
theological, and cultural. Each reading will then
lead to an examination of the artistic environment
that preceded and succeeded the ideas shaped by
these texts. It is expected that students will leave this
course with a rich knowledge of the central ideas and
works of art that have come to shape the continuing
dialogue between Catholicism and art.
MI 20772. Music History I: Medieval and
Renaissance
(3-0-3) Bower
A survey of music. The study of the major forms and
styles in Western history. Required of music majors
and minors, but open to students with sufficient
musical background.
MI 30182. Religious Writings and Images in
Medieval England
(3-0-3)
This course examines the visual and dramatic aspects
of literary religious writings. Texts include: The
Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ (selections),
The Cloud of the Unknowing (selections), Julian of
Norwich’s Showings, The Book of Margery Kempe, the
York Corpus Christi play, from the Creation to the Last
Judgement, and Chaucer’s Summoner’s Tale.
MI 30193. From Beowulf to Monty Python
(3-0-3)
What is so fascinating about the Middle Ages? As a
popular setting for film and literature throughout
the 20th century, the Middle Ages often serve either
as a Golden Age that critiques the problems of the
present, or a pre-Enlightenment epoch of superstition and ignorance. From T.H. White’s King Arthur
to Errol Flynn’s Robin Hood and Monty Python’s
search for the Holy Grail, this course will explore
the medieval period through its own texts as well
as the modern texts that represent it. The legend of
King Arthur, read against the background of English history, will serve as a foundation from which
to examine how a story changes to meet changing
historical needs. Seamus Heaney’s new translation
of the Old English epic Beowulf will give us the opportunity to think about what makes a hero, while
John Gardner’s Grendel tells the same story in a way
that asks what makes a monster. Finally, we will try
to determine what purpose the Middle Ages serve in
the modern imagination, from C.S. Lewis’ The Lion,
the Witch and the Wardrobe to the Mystery! series
Cadfael. Ultimately, we will use this fascination with
the Middle Ages to examine the complex means by
which the present approaches the past.
MI 30194. The Journey in Medieval Literature
(3-0-3) Bays
Map’s The Quest of the Holy Grail; Dante’s Divine
Comedy; Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales; Cervantes’ Don
Quixote.
MI 30195. Love in the Middle Ages
(3-0-3)
This course will explore the complex, moving, and
often contradictory medieval literatures of love. We
will begin with spiritual meditations on the love of
God for human beings and the love of humans for
God, examining how love was imagined to work
within human communities by such figures as St.
Augustine and St. Francis. We will then discuss what
has been called “courtly love,” as it was depicted in
12th century Arthurian romances and in handbooks
of love. We will finish with the late medieval notions
of love and the self found in Chaucer’s poetry and
Malory’s Arthurian prose.
MI 30203. Middle Ages I
(3-0-3) Lyon
This course will examine the history of the Roman
world from the time of the first incursions of barbarians into the Roman Empire in the third century
to the time of the final invasions in the 10th. It will
concentrate first on the crises of the third century,
and on the consequent transformation of the relatively unified, urbanized, tolerant, polytheistic Roman Empire of Late Antiquity into the two distinct,
deurbanized, intolerant, monotheistic, and politically
divided civilizations of Latin or Catholic Christendom and Greek or Orthodox Christendom. Next,
it will briefly examine the emergence in the seventh
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century of the new monotheistic religion of Islam
and of the new civilization and empire centered on
it, which quickly conquered not only the old Persian
empire but most of the Asian and all of the African
provinces of the continuing Roman empire, and in
711–18 conquered most of Spain as well. The remainder of the course will concentrate on the history
of Latin Christendom and its pagan barbarian neighbors to the north and east between the beginning of
the Germanic conquests of the western provinces ca.
400 and the final conversion of the peoples of central
and northern Europe to Christianity and the simultaneous emergence of a new sociopolitical order in
the older kingdoms around 1000. There will be two
short papers, two tests, and a final examination.
MI 30204. Middle Ages II
(3-0-3)
This course is designed as a topical introduction to
European history between 1000 and 1500. It will
examine the evolution of various forms of economic
systems, societies, and civilizations in Western Europe during this period, concentrating on France,
Italy, England, and Germany. History majors as well
as students interested in a historical introduction to
medieval civilization are welcome.
MI 30216. England as a Nation, 1272–1603
Orthodox churches will be examined. The course
aspires to achieve a routine of interactive lectures.
MI 30235. Medieval Middle East
(3-0-3)
This course offers a survey of Middle Eastern history
from the rise of Islam in the 7th century CE until
the rise of Mongol successor polities in the 15th
century. The course is structured to cover political
and cultural developments and their relationship
with broader changes in society during the formative centuries of Islamic civilization. Specific topics
include: the career of the Prophet Muhammad and
the origins of the earliest Muslim polity; the creation
and breakup of the Islamic unitary state (the Caliphate); the impact of Turkish migrations on the Middle
East; social practices surrounding the transmission
of learning in the Middle Ages; the diversity of
approaches to Muslim piety and their social and
political expression; popular culture; non-Muslims in
Islamic society; the creation of the medieval Islamic
“international” cultural order. Among the more important themes will be long-term cultural and social
continuities with the Islamic and ancient Near East,
and concepts of religious and political authority.
MI 30269. World of the Late Middle Ages,
1300–1500
(3-0-3)
This interdisciplinary course examines the formation of English national identity from the reigns
of Edward I to Elizabeth I (1272–1603). Students
will gain an understanding of a time when English
society was transformed amidst the tumult of wars,
revolts, plague, and religious change, and emerged
with a clear sense of nationhood. The course will
combine lectures and discussions, including the
examination of primary source material. Throughout
the semester, students will be asked to write responses to reading material and produce several short
essays, as well as one research paper.
(3-0-3) Van Engen
The course studies Europe in the time of the late
Middle Ages, roughly 1300–1500, often called a
time of crisis: plague, war, rebellion, economic upheaval. But it was also a time of enormous achievement, of Dante and Chaucer, of new techniques in
warfare and government, of conciliar representation
in church and state, of extravagant display in fashion
and building. This course will proceed by way of
both secondary and primary readings, with at least
three short papers and student discussion required.
MI 30217. One Hundred Years War (1337–
1453)
(3-0-3)
This course will provide a history of the crusading
movement of Western Europe (ca. AD 1095–1291)
and its impact on the civilizations of the medieval
West and Near East. Course material will address the
history not only of the events of the Crusades, but
of the peoples and ideas involved in them as well as
their long-term legacies. What were the motivations
of the Christian crusaders? How did the Muslims
and Jews of the Near East view the Crusades, and
how did they respond to them? In what ways did the
prolonged contact between these two major civilizations affect the societies, religions, and economies
of each?
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the history of France and England during the 14th and early 15th centuries. Major
themes include the dynastic claims of English kings
upon the crown of France, the Black Death, the rise
of the Burgundian state, the growth of a middle
class, the question of growing national identity, and
new trends in the arts.
MI 30218. History of Christianity to 1500
(3-0-3)
A survey of the development of Christianity from
late antiquity to the eve of the 16th-century Reformation. Emphases include processes of Christianization, definitions of prescribed and proscribed beliefs
and practices, institutional elaboration, relations
with imperial and royal authority, impact of and
on culture, and varieties of religious behaviors. Although the history of the Latin (Catholic) church is
highlighted, the dynamics and consequences of its
separation first from the Oriental and then from the
MI 30271. Crusade and Jihad: Medieval Holy
Wars
MI 30272. Christian/Jew/Muslim in the Middle
Ages
(3-0-3)
This course examines the three major Abrahamic
religions of the medieval West. We will explore the
similarities and the differences among the three religions, and consider how they influenced each other
and how they distanced and refuted each other. The
goal is to investigate the range of ideas concerning
the nature of faith and law existing in the Middle
Ages and to think about how context—political,
social, cultural, and intellectual—informs those
ideas. During the semester students will compare important texts from the three major religions, analyze
their content, and evaluate the relationships between
them. All of our reading will be primary sources,
available for purchase at the bookstore or as part of
a course pack.
MI 30273. Muslims and Christians in the
Medieval World
(3-0-3) Constable
Corequisite(s): HIST 32330
The encounter between Christianity and Islam began
in the seventh century AD, the time of the Prophet
Muhammad. Within a few centuries, Islamic rule
had spread across the southern Mediterranean world
from Syria to Spain. This shift initiated a long term
relationship—sometimes hostile and sometimes
peaceful—between Christians and Muslims in these
regions. The neighboring presence of Islam had an
enduring influence on medieval Christian theology,
philosophy, medical knowledge, literature, culture,
imagination, art, and material life. Likewise, developments in Christian Europe and Byzantium, especially the Crusades, affected the Islamic world. This
course will trace the history of the Christian-Muslim
relationship, from its beginnings in the early medieval period until the Renaissance (15th century). The
heritage of this medieval encounter still has profound
resonance in the modern world of today.
MI 30274. Gender, Sexuality, and Power in the
Middle Ages
(3-0-3)
What has gender to do with sexuality and how can
we think about its entanglements in terms of a history of power? How do shifting borders between what
counts as masculine and what counts as feminine
produce other kinds of bodies in medieval societies:
bodies that don’t matter? Using original sources and
material remains produced from the third through
15th centuries, together with current feminist and
queer theory, students will think about the work of
gendered embodiment and the production of bodies
that don’t matter.
MI 30281. War and Diplomacy in the Middle
Ages
(3-0-3) Lyon
What kinds of governments and “non-state actors” engaged in warfare and diplomacy during the
European Middle Ages? Were battles and military
campaigns commonplace between approximately
500 and 1500 AD? Did the rulers of Europe in this
period develop effective strategies for settling their
disputes in more peaceful ways? This course will give
students the opportunity to answer these and other
questions about the nature of war and diplomacy
in the Middle Ages. Topics will include the Roman
Empire’s efforts to control the waves of Germanic
invaders; the dynastic disputes that regularly threatened to destroy the Merovingian and Carolingian
Empires; the Viking incursions; the Papacy’s conflicts
with the rulers of Germany; the crusaders’ strategies
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for conquering and maintaining control of the Holy
Land; the emergence of the Italian city-states as military powers; and the Hundred Years War. Through
lectures, discussions, and the reading of a broad
range of primary sources, students will be challenged
to think about how various types of medieval rulers
used war and diplomacy to achieve their political
goals.
MI 30301. Ancient and Medieval Philosophy
(3-0-3) Burrell, Dumont, Freddoso
This course will concentrate on major figures and
persistent themes. A balance will be sought between
scope and depth, the latter ensured by a close reading
of selected texts.
MI 30411. Christian Theological Traditions I
(3-0-3) Cunningham
A survey of Christian theology from the end of the
New Testament period to the eve of the Reformation. Through the close reading of primary texts, the
course focuses on the Christology of such influential
thinkers as Origen, Athanasius, Augustine, Anselm,
and Aquinas. How do these thinkers understand
the person and work of Jesus Christ? What are the
Christological problems that they tried to resolve?
How do the different Christologies of these thinkers
reflect their differing conceptions of the purpose and
method of “theology”? Some attention will also be
given to non-theological representations of Christ.
How does the art of the early and medieval periods
manifest changes in the understanding of the significance of Jesus? This course is obligatory for all first
and supplementary majors but is open to others who
have completed the University requirements of theology and who wish to gain a greater fluency in the
history of Christian thought. Fall only.
MI 30500. Survey of Spanish Literature I
(3-0-3) Juárez
A survey of Spanish literature through 1700. Readings of selected texts in prose, poetry, and theater
from the medieval, Renaissance, and baroque
periods.
MI 30530. Survey of French Literature and
Culture I
(3-0-3) DellaNeva
Reading of selections and complete works of outstanding French authors from major genres and periods. All majors are required to take this sequence, or
equivalent advanced courses. Students are expected
to have already taken ROFR 30310.
MI 30551. Introduction to Italian Literature I
(3-0-3) Moevs
An introduction to the major writers, genres, and
critical issues of Italian literature from its origins
through the High Renaissance. Besides the Tre
Corone (Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio), we will read
works ranging from St. Francis and the duecento poets (Giacomo da Lentini, Guido Cavalcanti) through
the humanists (Poliziano, Lorenzo de’Medici), and
the great figures of the High Renaissance (Machiavelli, Ariosto), in their historical, cultural, geographical, and artistic (including musical) context. Taught
in Italian.
MI 30600. Latin Literature and Stylistics
(3-0-3) Krostenko
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20003 or CLLA 103 or CLLA
103A or CLLA 201
Provides an introduction to the advanced study of
Latin literary texts through close reading of selected
texts combined with practice in Latin composition.
MI 30601. Ovid’s METAMORPHOSES
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
In this course, we translate and discuss selected passages from the Metamorphoses, Ovid’s idiosyncratic
poetic history of the world. Topics for our discussions include the spiritual, moral, religious, political,
and physical transformations portrayed between the
creation story at the beginning and the deification
of Caesar at the end of the text; the tension between
Ovid’s adherence to Roman traditions and his irreverent, sometimes subversive, artistic originality;
the poem’s narrative techniques, poetic style, and
structure; the significance of intertextual allusions
to Greek drama, Virgilian epic, and Ovid’s own love
poetry; the instability of gender; portraits of the
poet within the work; and the innumerable faces of
love, as presented through characters who are pious,
raging with passion, inseparable, violent, infatuated,
lovesick, devoted, and much more. Above all, this
course aims at clarifying how Ovid’s inexhaustible
playfulness and delightful wit contributed to shaping a work of both epic grandeur and lyric intimacy
that continues to inspire poets, composers, novelists,
painters, and at least one playwright whose version
recently made it all the way to Broadway. Daily preparation and active participation in class are essential
components of the course; brief written assignments,
one midterm exam, one brief project, and a final
exam also count towards the final grade.
MI 30662. Canon and Literature of Islam
(3-0-3) Afsaruddin
This course is an introduction to the religious literature of the Arab-Islamic world. Emphasis is on
works from the classical and medieval periods of
Islam, roughly from the seventh to the 14th century of the Common Era. We will read selections
from the Qur’an (the sacred scripture of Islam), the
Hadith literature (sayings attributed to the prophet
Muhammed), the biography of the Prophet, commentaries on the Qur’an, historical and philosophical texts, and mystical poetry. All texts will be read
in English translation. No prior knowledge of Islam
and its civilization is assumed, although helpful.
MI 30680. Medieval German Literature
(3-0-3)
This course constitutes a survey of German literature
from its beginnings during Germanic times until the
16th century. Ideas, issues and topics are discussed in
such a way that their continuity can be seen throughout the centuries. Lectures and discussions are in
German, but individual students’ language abilities
are taken into consideration. Readings include modern German selections from major medieval authors
and works such as Hildebrandslied, Rolandslied,
Nibelungenlied, Iwein, Parzival, Tristan, courtly lyric
poetry, the German mystics, secular and religious
medieval drama, Der Ackermann aus Bohmen, and
the beast epic Reineke Fuchs. Class discussions and
brief presentations in German by students on the
selections are intended as an opportunity for stimulating exchange and formal use of German.
MI 30690. Holy Fools in Christian Traditions
(3-0-3)
No prerequisite. Taught in English. Through the
analysis of a variety of texts ranging from the New
Testament books to hagiographies and philosophical treatises we will examine different forms of holy
foolishness in spiritual and cultural traditions of
Eastern and Western Christianity and establish their
cultural bearings. Concepts under discussion will
include asceticism; sanctity; heresy; canonization;
hagiography. Among the course readings will be the
First Epistle of the Apostle Paul to the Corinthians;
Early Christian Paterika; individual Vitae of Byzantine holy fools (St. Simeon of Emessa, St. Andrew
of Constantinople); controversial Lives of Christian
Saints (Life of Alexis the Man of God); Lives of Eastern
Orthodox Saints (Kieve Cave Monks; St. Basil the
Fool of Moscow); Lives of Western Christian Saints
(St. Francis of Assisi); and later elaborations on the
subject of folly found in such works as “In Praise of
Folly” by Erasmus of Rotterdam and “Madness and
Civilization”by Michel Foucault.
MI 30700. Survey of Medieval Art
(3-0-3)
This course will introduce the visual arts of the
period c. AD 300 to c. AD 1300. In the course of
the semester, we shall devote much time to considering the possibility of a history of medieval art, as
the objects and practices of the Middle Ages will be
shown to make our assumptions about the nature
of art history problematic. Working from individual
objects and texts we will construct a series of narratives that will attend to the varieties of artistic practices available to the Middle Ages. From these, it will
be shown that art was a vital, complex, lucid, and
formative element in the societies and cultures, both
secular and sacred, that shaped this period.
MI 30701. Survey: Medieval Architecture
(3-0-3)
This course will investigate the art produced in Western Europe between the seventh and 11th centuries.
Often characterized as a Dark Age, this period in fact
demonstrates a fertile, fluid, and inventive response
to the legacy of Late Antique Christianity. The
course will focus on the production and reception of
illuminated manuscripts, perhaps the site where the
most original encounters with and re-shaping of this
legacy occur. This course should interest those who
wish to think through the relationship of words and
images on the page and in life.
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MI 30723. Gothic Art
(3-0-3)
This course studies Gothic monuments-who commissioned and made them and how they functioned
for different audiences. Among others we consider
the following questions: what motives fueled large
architectural enterprises? What was their cultural,
political, and social significance to women and men,
to the laity and clergy, and to viewers from different
social classes? How did imagery convey complex
theological messages to this varied audience? How
did architectural or public images differ from the
portable private works of art which became increasingly popular in the late Gothic period?
MI 30753. Art into History: Byzantine
(3-0-3)
Byzantine art has often been opposed to the traditions of Western naturalism, and as such has been
an undervalued or little known adjunct to the story
of medieval art. In order to develop a more sophisticated understanding of this material we will examine
the art produced in Byzantium in the period from
the ninth to the 12th century, a period marking
the high point of Byzantine artistic production and
influence. Stress will be placed upon the function
of this art within the broader setting of this society.
Art theory, the notions of empire and holiness, the
burdens of the past, and the realities of contemporary praxis will be brought to bear upon our various
analyses of material from all media. How we, as art
historians, can write the history of this rich culture
will be a central issue of this course.
MI 30754. The Art of Mythology
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. This cross-disciplinary class
is an exploration of the representation of classical
myth in Western art and literature, ranging from
the seventh century BCE. to the 18th century CE
Beginning with mythological subjects in the political and religious sculpture, temple architecture and
vase decoration of Ancient Greece, we will move on
to study Roman painting and sculpture, medieval
Ovidian allegory, the Renaissance reinvention of
classical types and 18th-century neo-classicism. We
will compare literary and visual narratives, evaluating the discursive modes of each, and analyzing how
and why poets, philosophers, artists, sculptors, and
architects selected and adapted the episodes that
they did. Primary readings will include selections
from Greek and Roman epic, lyric and dramatic
poetry, Greek and Roman philosophical mythology,
and early analyses of the relationship between art
and myth such as Philostratus’s Eikones. Among the
artistic works that we will examine will be Raphael’s
Roman cycles, Bellini and Titian’s poesie, and Bernini’s sculpted dramas. We will consider the erudite
contexts for such works, including gardens, drawing
rooms, princely residences, and civic institutions. We
will discuss the connection between political power
and myth, and concepts such as heroism, metamorphosis, and earthly and divine love. One aim of this
class will be to identify the explanatory character of
myth, and of story-telling within culture, as means
of historical self-understanding, self-revelation, and
catharsis.
the way historical narratives are constructed. Assignments include a research project of 10 to 15 pages to
be worked out in consultation with the instructor.
MI 30755. Rome: Journey in Art and History
MI 30901. History of Communication
Technologies
(3-0-3) Gill
This class is an exploration of the history and culture
of Rome from late medieval times through the 20th
century, with an emphasis on art and architecture.
We will examine the urban panorama of the Eternal
City through a series of layered investigations of its
major sites and monuments, such as the Capitoline Hill, St. Peter’s and the Vatican complex, the
Lateran, and Santa Maria Maggiore. We will read
travelers’ descriptions and literary evocations of
the city with a view to reliving the enchantment of
Rome, and the “idea” of Rome, through the ages. In
addition to our readings and lectures, members of
the class will have an opportunity to develop projects
on objects, structures, or works of art of their own
choosing.
MI 30800. Ancient and Medieval Political
Theory
(3-0-3) Keys
What is the meaning of justice and why should we
care about it? Can politics ever perfectly establish
justice? Which forms of government are best for
human beings to live under, and why? What is the
political relevance of religion and philosophy, family
and ethnicity, war and peace, nature and freedom,
law and right? What are the qualities of a good
citizen and political leader? How should relations
among diverse political communities be conducted?
This course introduces students to theoretical reflection on these and related questions through the
study of some of the great works of ancient and
medieval political thought. Readings will include
writings of authors such as Thucydides, Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, Augustine, Farabi, Maimonides, and
Aquinas.
MI 30900. Unsolved Historical Mysteries
(3-0-3)
This course examines three episodes: the trial of the
Knights Templar (1312), the trial of Joan of Arc
(1431), and the fate of the princes in the Tower
(1483). Emphasis will be on the careful reading of
primary texts (in translation), evaluating conflicting
accounts, source criticism, surveying historiographical debates, and reconstructing plausible narratives.
The trial of the Templars illustrates the difficulty of
discovering the truth from suspicious and contradictory evidence. Were the Templars guilty of secret
crimes, or the victims of scheming political enemies?
The conviction of Joan of Arc as a heretic was almost
immediately denounced, and provides an interesting
case study in the convergence of religion and politics.
The fate of the princes in the Tower of London is a
classic historical mystery. Did Richard III have them
killed, or did they somehow survive only to reappear
in the reign of Henry VII? At stake here is the reputation of Richard III. Was he a monstrous villain or
the victim of Tudor propaganda? Each case illustrates
(3-0-3)
A history of the survival and destruction of books,
from Alexandria to the Internet. Our understanding of historical events is based primarily on written
evidence. But have you ever stopped to consider how
these documents were made, how they were preserved, and how it is that we possess them now? This
course questions how we “know” anything about the
past by examining the transmission of written sources through time. We will survey the different ways
that people have recorded their histories—in stone,
on papyrus scrolls, in hand-written and printed
books, on websites—and how their choices have affected the way we now understand the past. We will
also consider how libraries have helped to create and
shape “knowledge” through their accumulation and
preservation of these sources. Course requirements
include participation in class discussions, completion
of a series of short papers, a midterm examination,
and a final paper and presentation.
MI 30902. Polish and Lithuan Commonwealth
(3-0-3)
This course will survey the history of the Polish
and Lithuanian Commonwealth from its origins in
the 1386 dynastic union of Jogailo, Grand Duke of
Lithuania, with Hedvig, the daughter of Polish king,
Louis the Great (1370–82), through the transformation into a political union at Lublin in 1569 to the
collapse of the Commonwealth, which culminated
in three partitions at the end of the 18th century.
Special emphasis will be placed on the political processes that transformed the Commonwealth into one
of the most democratic countries in the world, but
also ultimately contributed to its decline. Attention,
too, will be paid to the wars that ravaged the Commonwealth, including those with Muscovy, Sweden,
the Ottoman Empire, and with the peoples of what
today is modern Ukraine.
MI 30903. Modeling Sanctity: The Saint in
Image and Text
(3-0-3)
In this course, we will examine the lives and legacy
of selected saints with a view to defining the ideal
qualities and criteria by which sainthood is made
known. Incorporating visual as well as textual materials, hagiographies, theological writings, and written
testimonies, the course will consider the varieties of
evidence that testify to sanctity. An important part of
this course will be a discussion of how different kinds
of evidence must be evaluated according to their medium and audience, for example, how visual portrayals—whether portrait, narrative cycle or manuscript
representations—can be compared to written ones,
and differentiated from textual sources not only in
iconographic terms but also as unique and forceful
forms of knowledge in their own right.
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MI 40003. Introduction to Christian Latin
(4-0-4) Sheerin
This course has two goals: to improve the student’s
all-around facility in dealing with Latin texts and to
introduce the student to the varieties of Christian
Latin texts and basic resources that aid in their study.
Exposure to texts will be provided through common
readings that will advance in the course of the semester from the less to the more demanding and will include Latin versions of Scripture, exegesis, homiletic,
texts dealing with religious life, formal theological
texts, and Christian Latin poetry. Philological study
of these texts will be supplemented by regular exercises in Latin composition. (Medieval Latin, a survey
of Medieval Latin texts, will follow this course in the
spring term.)
MI 40004. Medieval Latin
(3-0-3) Mantello
This course is an introduction to the Latin language
and literature of the late antique and medieval periods (ca. AD 200–500). Designed to move students
toward independent work with medieval Latin
texts, the course will emphasize the close reading
and careful translation of a variety of representative
and word formation, orthography and pronunciation, morphology and syntax, and prose styles and
metrics. The course will also introduce the principal
areas of medieval Latin scholarship, including lexica,
bibliographies, great collections and repertories of
sources, and reference works for the study of Latin
works composed in the Middle Ages.
MI 40020. Intensive Latin Review
(1-0-1) Mantello
This course is an intensive, one-week review of the
principal construction of classical Latin syntax, designed for those who have completed elementary and
intermediate classical Latin or the equivalent and
wish to study medieval Latin.
MI 46020. Directed Readings
course; two written assignments, brief quizzes, one
midterm exam, and a final exam also count towards
the final grade.
MI 40102. History of the English Language
(3-0-3) O’Keeffe
This course is designed to introduce students to the
historical development of the English language, from
its earliest recorded appearance to its current state as
a world language.
MI 40110. Introduction to Old English
(3-0-3) O’Keeffe
Training in reading the Old English language, and
study of the literature written in Old English.
MI 40117. Beowulf
(3-0-3)
Beowulf is the longest and earliest surviving heroic
poem in any medieval Germanic language, and has
been recognized for over two centuries as a literary
masterpiece. Yet, on examination, the reasons why
it is reckoned a masterpiece are not always clear: its
narrative design is frequently oblique and obscure;
its language is dense and often impenetrable; and it
relates to a Germanic society which can barely be reconstructed, let alone understood, by modern scholarship. The aims of the course will be to understand
the narrative design and poetic language of Beowulf,
and then to attempt to understand these features of
the poem in the context of early Germanic society.
The language of Beowulf is difficult and therefore a
sound training in old English grammar and a good
reading knowledge of old English literature, especially poetry, are essential prerequisites for the course.
MI 40118. Introduction to Old English
(3-0-3)
Training in reading the Old English language, and
study of the literature written in Old English.
MI 40146. Chaucer: Canterbury Tales
(V-0-V)
Offers advanced undergraduate students a possibility
to work closely with a professor in preparing a topic
mutually agreed upon.
(3-0-3)
Chaucer’s masterwork, studied in its original Middle
English.
MI 40021. The Medieval Book
(3-0-3)
Though Chaucer lived and worked in London, only
rarely does his poetry depict urban life. This course
will explore the idea of the city in Chaucer’s work in
three ways: by looking at the cities he does represent
(Troy, London), by examining his relationship to
urban forms of cultural expression (mystery cycles,
mummings, processions), and by investigating city
life in 14th century London. Is the city “absent” for
Chaucer? Can we discern the influence of urban life
on the Canterbury Tales? On Troilus and Criseyde?
Students should come prepared to learn to read
Middle English aloud (no experience necessary).
(3-0-3) Bower
A historical survey of the medieval book as a cultural, archeological, artistic, and commercial object
from about AD 300 to 1500.
MI 40025. Readings in Medieval Latin
(3-0-3)
This course aims at making its students better
translators of medieval Latin texts. To that end, we
will focus on the translation and morphological and
syntactical analysis of a variety of excerpts. In order
to ensure the relevance of our brief selections for the
broader research interests of the students, our readings will be taken whenever feasible from the reading
lists of other courses offered during the current term.
Enrollment in any of these other courses is not a prerequisite for our course. Daily preparation and active
participation in class are essential components of this
MI 40147. Chaucer and the City
MI 40180. Medieval Drama
(3-0-3)
This class will exercise literary, theatrical, and religious imagination through readings, critical writing,
discussion and enactments of medieval dramatic
texts. There also will be occasional viewings of filmed
contemporary presentations of medieval plays. The
goal of our individual and collective work aims at
a deeper understanding and appreciation of what
it was that medieval people meant to do when they
“played” salvation history-altering, embellishing, at
times “modernizing” and sometimes “deforming” the
text of sacred scripture on which these pre-renaissance dramas were based.
In the course of the semester we will attend closely
to the gradual, intricate movement from sacred liturgies to secular comedies, with special attention given
to the relation of actors and audiences. In so doing,
we will also observe and assess—theatrically and
theologically—how the comic drama of everyday
events and concerns has been subtly connected to
the events of salvation history. We will also try to
decide whether the development of farce, ribaldry,
melodrama, and realism were a logical outgrowth of,
or a deviation from, the original sacred traditions. All
members of the class will take their occasional turn
as producers and performers.
In addition to periodic short written assignments of
one to two pages, each student will submit a version
of production notes and observations generated by
the experience of serving as producer and/or actor in
an extended scene or entire short drama. Everyone,
including the teacher, will read with an open notebook: this informal reading journal will record ideas,
thoughts, difficulties, insights, questions, frustrations, and illuminations that will serve simultaneously as a sourcebook for the papers and productions.
MI 40192. Readings in Medieval Literature
(3-0-3)
This course attempts to explore the variety of medieval representations of love, and to show how they
are intimately bound up with questions of free will
and destiny, gender relations, the secularization of
learning, time, and eternity.
MI 40194. Readings in Medieval Literature
(3-0-3)
In this course we will read a series of medieval texts
chosen to display the remarkable variety and diversity of subjects and styles that attracted some of the
most powerfully expressive men and women of the
Middle Ages [500–1500]. Readings are drawn from
the fields of theology, philosophy, literary criticism,
poetry, and prose fiction. All readings will be in
Modern English translation; and the texts have been
chosen for their exceptional ability to display and
elicit sympathetic historical imagination, whose construction and critique is our collective term project.
Midterm and final exams. Regularly assigned short
papers (one to two pages) will serve as the basis for
in-class discussions, and will prepare you to write the
final term paper, due at the end of the semester, on a
topic of your choice, to be individually determined
in conference with the teacher. Students, individually
or in teams, with an appropriate and well-conceived
creative project arising from the work of the class
may, with prior approval, substitute that project for
the final term paper.
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TEXTS: Augustine, On Christian Doctrine; Boethius,
Consolation Of Philisophy; Boccaccio, selections from
On Poetry; Marie de France, Lais; four short stories
[the four “Branches”] from the anonymous Welsh
Mabinogion; the anonymous French Song of Roland
and Quest of the Holy Grail [original precursor to
Monty Python and Indiana Jones versions] and
Chaucer’s Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale.
MI 40197. Medieval Visions
(3-0-3)
A survey of Medieval Literature, excluding Chaucer.
MI 40210. Late Antiquity
(3-0-3)
This course will explore the transformation of the
Roman World from about 300 to 600 AD. We
will ask: was the “fall” of the Roman Empire a
civilizational catastrophe? Or was it a slow, messy
process blending continuity and change? Or was
late Antiquity itself a dynamic and creative period?
Our emphasis will fall on: The changing shape of
Roman public life; the barbarians and their relations
with Rome; the emergence of the Catholic Church;
the triumph of Christian culture; literature, art, and
architecture in the late imperial world. There will be
a midterm and a final. Students will write either one
term paper or a series of shorter papers. Readings
will emphasize primary sources.
MI 40212. World of Charlemange
(3-0-3)
The Carolingian (from carolus, Latin for Charles:
Charles the Great—Charlemagne—was the most
famous Carolingian) period, roughly the eighth
and ninth centuries, was foundational for Western
Europe. But this was also the time when the midByzantine Empire consolidated its position and
when the Abbasid family of caliphs introduced
important and durable changes in the Islamic world.
This course will focus on the West in the age of
Charlemagne, but will draw frequent comparisons
with and make continuous reference to Europe’s
Byzantine and Islamic neighbors. The course will explore such themes as: Europe’s Roman and Christian
inheritances from antiquity; the peoples of the Carolingian world; kingship and empire; political and
social institutions and ideologies; religious and secular law; war and diplomacy; agriculture and trade;
the church—popes, bishops, monks, and nuns;
theology; art and architecture; Latin and vernacular
literature. Reading assignments will combine modern scholarship and primary sources (in translation).
Students will write midterm and final examinations
and will choose between several short papers or one
long paper. Graduate students will meet weekly with
the professor, carry out reading assignments different from those of the undergraduates, and submit a
series of short papers.
MI 40214. Renaissance Italy
(3-0-3)
This course examines the political, cultural, social,
and religious history of Italy from about 1350 to
1550. Starting with an extended study of Florence,
its economic foundations, social and political structures, artistic monuments, and key personalities, the
course then examines how the culture of the Florentine Renaissance spread to the rest of Italy, especially
to the papal court of Rome and the princely courts
of northern Italy, and, finally, to the new nationstates of northern Europe. Key topics will include:
the growth of the Italian city-state; the appearance
of new, Renaissance “characters” (the merchant,
the prince, the courtier, the mercenary, the learned
lady, the self-made man); Renaissance humanism
and the classical revival; the relationship between art
and politics; and Renaissance ideas of liberty, virtue,
historical change, and the individual’s relationship to
God. The course will not tell a story of steady progress from medieval to modern institutions, societies,
and modes of thinking; rather, we will consider the
Renaissance as a period in flux, in which established
traditions thrived alongside creative innovations and
vigorous challenges to authority. Students will write
one long paper and take a midterm and a final exam.
MI 40215. History of Medicine to 1700
(3-0-3)
This class surveys the history of Western biomedical ideas, research, and health care practices from
its ancient Mediterranean and Middle Eastern
foundations to the medical reforms and materialistic
theories of the mid-18th century. The canonical approach emphasizes the growth of rational medicine,
focusing on the development of medical epistemology and method, but also considers how medicine
as it has been practiced in the West reflected classical
theory, embraced folk beliefs and treatments, and
integrated the therapeutic and doctrinal knowledge
of Medieval Islam. Medical thought and practice
was shaped by the intellectual, social, and religious
changes that shook Europe in the late Middle Ages
and early modern period, resulting in a profound
transformation of natural philosophy and efforts to
reform society during the scientific revolution and
nascent Enlightenment. Many of the basic elements
of modern medical ethics, research methodology,
and the criteria for sound scientific thinking that first
emerged in late classical Greek thought were refined
during this period, and much of the diversity of healing paradigms in American and European national
cultures today, as well as many of the reactions of
Western medical authorities to non-Western ideas
and practices, can be understood if viewed in the
context of antecedent medical principles.
MI 40231. Medieval Spain
(3-0-3)
This course, a smaller reading plus discussion course,
examines the history of Spain in the Middle Ages.
Topics to explore include the arrival of Islam, the
Christian Reconquest, Iberian Jewish life, Iberian
economy and urban life under Christian rule, the
idea of Iberian society, and Jews and Muslims under
Christian rule.
MI 40232. Anglo-Saxon England
(3-0-3)
Who are the English? In this course we will explore
the origins of England, and discuss the social, cultural, and political changes taking place on the island
of Britain from the pre-Christian era until the 12th
century. Beginning with an exploration of Celtic
Britain, we will then analyze the principal AngloSaxon kings and their achievements; the historical
significance of English poems such as Beowulf; the
lasting effects of the Vikings in England; and the
Norman conquest of England in the 11th. century.
General themes will include the problems associated
with Anglo-Saxon Christianity, how the English portrayed their own history, England’s relationship with
her neighbors (e.g. Scotland, Wales, Ireland, and
France), and the contributions of medieval England
to European history.
MI 40233. Medieval Ireland
(3-0-3)
This course comprises a survey of the history and
culture of the Irish and the other Celtic peoples from
the Neolithic era to approximately AD 1500. We
will explore the main documentary sources in translation—mythological and historical, ecclesiastical
and secular—as well as discussing the importance of
the archaeological evidence.
MI 40234. Late Medieval/Early Modern Ireland
(3-0-3)
This course offers new perspectives on the struggle
for mastery in Ireland from 1470 to 1660. Though
keeping in mind the traditional view of the “English
reconquest” (decades of rebellion, dispossession, and
plantation until, in the aftermath of Cromwell, all
Ireland was finally subjected to English rule) this
course will take a different approach. By investigating a range of primary sources from the period,
students will explore the interactions between the
three different models of conquest: (1) descendants
of the old Norman colonists (e.g. Fitzgeralds and
Butlers) seeking to finish the job; (2) Tudor reform
(inspired by Renaissance optimism), by which the
English attempted to establish rule by means of legal,
social, and cultural assimilation; and (3) unabashed
exploitation by English private entrepreneurs on the
make. The most important effect of these “contending conquests” was the way they shaped the diverse
responses of the native Irish, ranging from accommodation and assimilation to outright rebellion and
national war.
MI 43259. Jerusalem
(3-0-3)
This research seminar provides an in-depth examination of the city of Jerusalem and its diverse historical
experiences from the rise of Islam to the present (c.
600–2000). This course is primarily student-driven:
students will lead portions of discussions, present
their research, and constructively critique the work
of their peers.
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MI 43260. Seminar: The Black Death
(3-0-3)
This course explores the scholarship on the “Black
Death” in seminar format. Each week, students will
read primary sources, theoretical/methodological
articles, and conflicting historiographical opinions,
working from the outset to produce original, issuebased arguments that address the central questions
of the literature. At stake in the course are questions
concerning medieval and modern understandings of
nature, morality, and medicine; of the relationship
between economy and culture; the nature of “crisis”
and the difficulty of interpreting later-medieval
sources pertaining to all of these.
MI 40261. Politics and Religion in Medieval
Europe
(3-0-3)
This course considers the intersection between political action and religious claims in medieval Europe.
Virtually all the powers—kings and popes, princes
and bishops—claimed to act on religious principle
and in accord with transcendent notions of virtue
or world order. Yet they fought bitterly with each
other, with words and with swords, and mutually
condemned one another. The course will begin with
the showdown between emperors and popes known
as the Investiture Contest, then take up pivotal figures like Pope Innocent III, King Frederick II, and
Pope Boniface IX, and conclude with sections on the
Spiritual Franciscans and on conciliarism.
MI 40262. Witchcraft and Occult 1400-1700
(3-0-3)
The persecution of witches took place during the
period when modern rationality was being defined,
from the High Renaissance to the early Enlightenment. Although the numbers executed were not as
great as used to be thought, the notoriety of some
cases and the widespread use of the concepts meant
that the ideas involved were of considerable importance, not least in defining the nature of womanhood
and the scope of the devil’s power in the world.
There was wide variation across Europe, with some
Catholic and Protestant states prosecuting extensively and others largely avoiding trials for witchcraft
or stopping them at an early date. In many countries
and regions, most cases were against women; in some
others, most were against men. The powers and
character attributed to witches varied widely and the
beliefs involved were not universally accepted as true.
Explaining this complexity has proved to be one of
historians’ most challenging tasks, provoking bitter
disputes and varied explanations.
This course will examine texts from the period, to
see what contemporaries made of the matter, and
studies by a wide range of historians, who have used
anthropology, psychology, and gender studies in an
attempt to explain the phenomenon. Attention will
also be paid to learned magic, alchemy, and astrology
in order to provide contrast and context for early
modern beliefs about the occult.
MI 40263. Foreign Influence in Medieval
Ireland
(3-0-3)
This course is a broad-based exploration of Ireland
and her neighbors from the eighth century to the
16th. Beginning with the long-term consequences of
Viking activity in Ireland and England, students will
consider in detail the reasons behind the Norman
conquests of Ireland and Britain, and the profound
French political, social, and cultural influence on
the region. We will then focus on Irish interprovincial warfare, especially the extent to which the real
Brian Boru corresponded to the saintly champion
portrayed in some historical sources. We will assess
relations among Ireland, England, Wales, and France
by examining questions of church and state; and
investigate why propaganda and “forged” history
became predominant in the British Isles in the 12th
century. The course also includes analysis of English
colonization in Ireland from English, Irish, and Scottish perspectives; and assessment of Gaelic politics
and culture during the Tudor conquest.
MI 40264. The Vikings
Crusade, 1147–49; Third Crusade, 1189–92; Fourth
Crusade, 1202–04). Finally, we will question how
accounting and violence intersect with the treatment
of Jewish communities residing in England during
the 12th century.
MI 40266. Heretics and Friars, Mystics and
Nuns
(3-0-3)
From about 1100 until about 1400, European society witnessed wave after wave of new religious movements. These energies yielded groups and teachers of
all stripes, men and women regarded as heretics and
as saints. This course will treat the most important
of these, from the Cistercian monks who rejected
the established ways of their fellow Benedictines
around 1100, to Francis of Assisi’s lay penitents and
preachers, to suspect beguines in the Lowlands and
the Rhineland mystics. The emphasis will fall upon
studying texts from these religious teachers and actors that will help us get at the aspirations of these
new religious, while setting them into their social
and cultural environments.
(3-0-3)
The Vikings are notorious in European history for
plunder and pillage, pagan savagery, and horned
helmets. Participants in this lecture-and-discussion
course will study the impact of Viking invaders in
Europe and North America over four centuries, and
will consider whether Scandinavians made any real
contribution to the societies they terrorized. Discussion (including heated debates) will be based on
medieval primary sources from England, Ireland,
France, and Russia. Scandinavian life at home and
the possible reasons for migration will also be considered, as background to the more exciting events
abroad. The importance of archaeological evidence
(including art), and modern treatments of Vikings
in film and literature, will also be included. Requirements include participation in group discussions, a
final exam, and a research paper (10 pages approx.)
on a topic of the student’s choice.
MI 40267. Thought and Culture in the HighMiddle Ages
MI 40265. War/Money/Romance: 1100–1200
MI 40268. Martyrs and Monastic Lives
(3-0-3)
During the 12th century, the royal court of England
made revolutionary advances in killing, counting,
and judging at the same time that they patronized the emergence of Arthurian romance. History
textbooks usually compartmentalize the history of
war, accounting, the law, and romance. This course,
instead, asks what they may have in common, specifically how they were engendered on the bodies of
imaginary dead maidens, cannibalized Muslims, and
tortured Jews. We will study breakthroughs in royal
accounting procedures as a powerful formal rhetoric
with links to law and war. As a formal rhetoric capable of abstracting space, accounting transformed
the social space of the body, household, and court
and also inaugurated new notions of social time. We
also will consider how the same court patronized
new forms of Arthurian romance. We will ask how
romance renders violence and forgets the violence
prepetrated by Christians elsewhere, especially on
the Crusades (First Crusade, 1096–1102; Second
(3-0-3)
This is a course about the thought and culture of
Medieval Europe in the years 1100 to 1350. The
course takes seriously the notion of “mind,” that all
people, whatever their gender or social class, were
gifted with powers of understanding and decision
making amidst life’s dilemmas. It asks what we know
about the way these people thought about, perceived, and experienced their world, what ideals they
set for themselves, what they hoped to achieve, and
how they set about the task of living. The course will
proceed by lectures on specific topics and introductions to texts or authors, but in good part by way of
a careful reading and discussion of assigned primary
sources. Those sources will range from medieval romances to mystical poems, from political philosophy
to devotional meditations.
(3-0-3)
Early and medieval Christian communities were
largely defined by their views not only of God or
the personhood of Jesus, but also of the body; under
fierce debate were questions of what, when, or even
whether, to eat, drink, or engage in sexual activity.
By reading intriguing texts stemming from the experience of martyrdom and monasticism, this course
will illustrate how often explicitly theological concerns (for instance, an understanding of the incarnation) have their roots in just such pressing social
concerns. Christians were further urged to ponder
the relationship of the body to theology, by the
experience of sporadic persecution launched against
them initially by pagans, but after Constantine, increasingly by other groups of Christians. This course
will examine a selection of intriguing texts stemming
from the experience of martyrdom and monasticism.
We will begin with the earliest portrait of Christians
left to us, namely that found in the New Testament,
and will end with the Reformation period, which
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not only saw a reassessment of the goals and goodness of the monastic life but also a resurgence of
persecution. Two further and related concerns will
also shape this course, namely, the uncovering of the
contours of “ordinary” Christian life in these periods, and a growing appreciation of how Christian
women, whose stories have often been eclipsed in
surveys devoted to intellectual or doctrinal history,
have shaped Christian tradition through their ascetic
practices, and have been in turn shaped by them.
Our perspective will be that of social historians.
MI 40269. Senses/Culture/Mind: LateMedieval Europe
(3-0-3)
This course studies the culture and thought of medieval Europe on the eve of its transition into the modern world, focusing on the 14th and 15th centuries.
This era is often depicted as a time of extremes, of
mystics, sophisticated court masques, impenetrably
difficult scholastic thought, and the dance of death.
Because contemporaries proved unusually articulate
in expressing their passions and worries in literature
and art, historians can examine their sense of life
and of death with care. Combination of lectures
and discussions; readings in primary and secondary
materials.
MI 40321. Boethius: An Introduction
(3-0-3)
This course will attempt a study of Boethius, one
of the foundational figures of medieval culture, in
an interdisciplinary and open-ended manner. Our
approach will be interdisciplinary in that we shall
simultaneously study philosophical—theological
and literary subject matter and simultaneously apply
philosophical—theological and literary methods. It
will be open-ended in that students will be expected
to react creatively to the topics under review in terms
of their own independent studies and research (e.g.
in connecting Latin and vernacular materials). During the course we shall read a broad selection of passages in Latin and in English translation drawn from
Boethius’ work in the fields of science (arithmetic,
music), logic, and theology. Part of the course will be
devoted to a close study of de consolation philosophia.
We shall study Boethius as reading intertextually
the Greek philosophers Plato and Aristotle and the
Greek scientists Nicomachus and Ptolemy, without
forgetting the Latin theology of Augustine. Turning
from Boethius to Boethius in quotation marks and
Boethius “under erasure,” we shall study Boethius
read intertextually by glossators, commentators, and
other writers from the eighth to the 14th century.
Requirement: one final essay (ca. 20 pp.)
MI 40361. Plato Christianus
(3-0-3) Gersh
This course is designed as an introduction to the
philosophy of Plato, the “Platonism” (i.e., Middle
Platonism, Neoplatonism) of antiquity, the transformation of Platonism by the Greek and Latin
Church Fathers, and the medieval and Renaissance
traditions derived from the above. In the first half
of the semester, we shall survey the tradition as a
whole and deal with a variety of general questions.
However, particular attention will be given to two
fundamental hermeneutic criteria employed by the
followers of this tradition: namely, “radical selectivity” and “philosophical allegorization.” In the second
half of the semester, two specific texts that have arguably set the pattern for the Latin and Greek intellectual traditions respectively will be studied in more
detail: Augustine’s On the City of God and the works
of pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite. The course is
intended to be accessible to students without knowledge of Latin or Greek. Requirement: one final paper
of approx. 20 pp.
MI 40363. Poetry and Philosophy in the
Twelfth Century
(3-0-3) Gersh
This course will aim to provide a close reading of
Bernard Silvestris’s Cosmographia and Alan of Lille’s
De Planctu Naturae against the background of early
12-century philosophical thought and grammatical-rhetorical theory. Although it will be initially
necessary to cover the philological and historical
ground with some care, the course will also attempt
to explore in a more speculative and creative manner
the question of the kind of relation between philosophy and literature in general that works like the
Cosmographia and De Planctu suggest. As stimuli to
such reflections, we shall pause to examine in some
detail such textual phenomena as the philosophical allegory, the hermeneutical and metaphysical
implications of number, the notion of self-reflexivity,
and the negative symbol. The course is intended to
be accessible to students without skill in Latin (although the latter would, obviously, be an advantage).
Requirement: one final paper of approx. 20 pp.
MI 40410. Jews and Christians through History
(3-0-3) Signer
In the closing days of the Second Vatican Council
Nostra Aetate (Declaration on non-Christian Religions) reversed a negative attitude of the Catholic
Church toward Judaism and the Jewish people. This
remarkable change promoted “dialogue” with Jews,
and positive changes in the ways in which Judaism
was presented in Liturgy and Catechesis. Reactions
from the Jewish communities were diverse: from
rejection to welcome. This course will explore a
number of issues that emerge from the history of
Christian thought and theology: How did a negative
image of Judaism develop within Christianity? In
what ways did these unfavorable teachings contribute
toward violence against the Jews? What is the relationship between Christian anti-Jewish teachings and
anti-Semitism? Is there any correspondence to Christian hostility within Judaism? In what ways have
Jewish authors reacted to Christian tradition? We
shall also want to construct a more positive theology
for the future. How can Jews and Christians develop
religious responses to modernity? In what senses
can a study of Judaism by Christians, or Christianity by Jews, help either community to understand
itself better? How can Christians and Jews develop
a theology of “the other” which is not triumphalist,
but empathic?
MI 40433. Theology of St. Augustine
(3-0-3)
Augustine of Hippo was arguably the most influential theological thinker in the history of western
Christianity. A brilliant professional rhetorician and
a profound student of Neoplatonic philosophy,
Augustine brought his gifts and training to the
service of the Church when he was baptized, after a
long struggle of faith, in 387. Yet perhaps because of
his gifts, he was always surrounded by controversy,
and has remained so down to the present—appearing to many to be responsible for some of the main
shortcomings of the Church’s theology and practice,
even as his writings largely set the agenda for later
theological discussion in the West. In this course,
we will read a representative sample of his major
works—some of his early philosophical treatises, the
Confessions, his Homilies on I John and on some
of the Psalms, some of his controversial works on
grace and human freedom, and parts of On Christian
Teaching, On the Trinity, and On the City of God. Our
goal will be to discover Augustine’s characteristic
blend of exegesis, pastoral concern, philosophical
speculation, and spirituality, and to let it challenge
and nourish our own reflective faith.
MI 40441. Thomas Aquinas: Theologian
(3-0-3)
The writings and thought of Thomas Aquinas
influenced the subsequent course of Catholic theology perhaps more than any other single theologian
in the church history. By exploring his career as a
Dominican master through a variety of his writings,
this course will provide students with a basic introduction to Aquinas theology. To that end, the course
will pay particular attention to his masterpiece the
summa theologiae as well as other shorter works in
order to highlight the major loci of his theology (e.g.
God, Trinity, creation, sin, grace, virtues, Christ, and
the sacraments). Students will be required to write
four papers on assigned readings and prepare short
class presentations.
MI 40452. St. Anselm’s Philosophy/Theology
(3-0-3)
In his encyclical Fides Et Ratio, Pope John Paul II
dedicates long passages to Saint Anselm’s account of
the relation between faith and reason, and to his concept of God. This course is a general introduction
to the philosophical theology of Saint Anselm based
on a reading of selected chapters from his works, in
particular the Monologion, the Proslogion, the Cur
Deus Homo, and the early dialogues. The themes
will include: Life and works, historical context, faith
and reason, proofs of the existence of God, doctrine
of the Trinity, theory of creation, philosophy of language, theory of truth, anthropology, ethical theory,
concept of freedom, freedom and grace, doctrine of
original sin, redemption, love of oneself related to
love of God, spirituality, monastic “techniques” of
the inner life, and influence. The course will consist
of lectures, discussions, and seminar presentations.
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MI 40465. Topics in Medieval Theology: The
Sacraments
(3-0-3) Prugl
An examination of the development of Christian
thought from the Council of Constance in 1415 to
the First Vatican Council in 1869–70, with special
attention given to the impact of the Reformation
and the Enlightenment on the formation of christian
theology.
MI 40470. Topics in Historical Theology:
Medieval Spirtuality
(3-0-3)
This course considers selected texts from the history
of Christian spirituality. The cluster of texts changes,
but some representative topics have included monastic texts, texts from the early Franciscan movement,
and texts in hagiography.
MI 40502. Renaissance and Baroque Poetry
of Spain
(3-0-3)
A close reading of traditional and Italianate poetry
that includes villancicos, romances, and the works
of Garcilaso de la Vega, Fray Luis de Leon, San Juan
de la Cruz, Gongora, Quevedo, and Sor Juana Ines
de la Cruz.
MI 40504. Cervantes: Don Quixote
(3-0-3)
A close reading of Cervantes’ novel in relation to the
prose tradition of the Renaissance: novella, the pastoral romance, the romance of chivalry, the humanist
dialogue, and the picaresque novel. We will also pay
attention to the historical, social, and cultural context of the work.
Students in this seminar must participate actively in
class discussions. Each student will be required to
make a presentation (15 minutes) upon the subject
of his/her term paper. The term paper, of approximately 8–10 pages, will be on a topic individually
agreed upon and discussed by each student with
the instructor. No prior knowledge of Cervantes is
necessary to take this course, but a solid knowledge
of Spanish is required. The final grade will be given
according to the following distribution: one midterm
exam, 20 percent; one term paper and presentation,
40 percent; one final exam, 25 percent; class participation, 15 percent.
MI 43506. Senior Seminar
(3-0-3)
This course may cover an in-depth study of a particular author, theme, genre or century. In addition
to treating primary texts, some critical material will
be required reading. The course culminates in a
substantial research paper. May be taken either fall
or spring term.
MI 40531. Introduction to Old French
(3-0-3)
This course is designed to be an introduction to the
language and dialects of medieval France, including
Anglo-Norman. Readings will include texts written
between the 12th and the 14th centuries, such as the
Lais of Marie de France, trouvere poetry, the prose
Lancelot, Machaut, and Froissart.
MI 40532. From Roland to the Holy Grail
(3-0-3)
A semester-long course focusing on the history of
medieval philosophy. It provides a more indepth
consideration of this period than is allowed in PHIL
30301 History of Ancient and Medieval Philosophy
and may be considered a follow-up to that course.
MI 40533. Life, Love, and Literature in
Renaissance Lyons
(3-0-3)
The city of Lyon was a cultural center of Renaissance
France. This course will focus on the literature that
arose from that location, most especially (but not exclusively) the love poetry of three French Renaissance
lyricists: Maurice Seve’s D’lie, the Rymes of Pernette
Du Guillet and the Oeuvres poetiques of Louise Labe.
Excerpts from other authors associated with Lyons,
including Rabelais, Marot, and Du Bellay will also
be treated. This course will take a “cultural studies”
approach, and students will be expected to work on
topics such as the presence of Italians, royal pageantry and celebrations, the presence of the court,
industry, fairs, banking and trade, architecture, art
and music, intellectual circles, and the Reformation
in the city of Lyons. Special attention will be given
to the role of women in Lyonnais society and the
Querelle des Amyes generated in that city. This course
will be taught in French. ROFR 30310 (Textual
Analysis) or prior experience with textual analysis
highly recommended. NOTE: If there is sufficient
interest, it may be possible to arrange a “field trip” to
Lyon over spring break. Please contact the professor
immediately if you have an interest in pursuing this
possibility.
MI 40552. Dante I: The Inferno
(3-0-3) Boitani
The course will be a journey inside the ultimate
nightmare in the whole history of literature: Dante’s
Inferno—a prison for eternity, accurately subdivided
like a model—dungeon, perfectly organized, with
no possible evasions, no bribery to the guardians,
no leagues between inmates, crossed through by two
traveling poets, one of them relating about their trip
with outstanding precision, the other guiding him
after rescuing him and becoming one of the great
characters of the entire poem. We will study this
great metaphor of a cosmic incarceration created by
Dante’s genius, and the amazing variety of the world
of the convicted felons, and the philosophical ideas
that rule this descent into the womb of the Earth
where Lucifer, the utmost convict, lies.
MI 40553. Dante II
(3-0-3)
An in-depth study, over two semesters, of the entire
Comedy, in its historical, philosophical and literary
context, with selected readings from the minor works
(e.g., Vita Nuova, Convivio, De Vulgari Eloquentia).
Lectures and discussion in English; the text will be
read in the original with facing-page translation. Students may take one semester or both, in either order.
MI 40554. Petrarch
(3-0-3)
The course will explore fundamental themes in Petrarch’s writings in Latin, especially the Secretum and
the epistles and in the Triumphs and the Canzoniere.
Contemporary critical approaches will be employed
in the analysis of the Canzoniere.
MI 40555. Boccaccio
(3-0-3)
A textual analysis of the Decameron, with emphasis
on structure and themes. Different critical approaches will be used in the analysis of individual tales,
their relationships to the frames, and their reflection
on Boccacio’s society.
MI 43556. Italian Senior Seminar
(3-0-3)
An in-depth study of a particular author, theme,
genre or century. In addition to treating the primary
texts, some critical material will be required reading.
This course culminates in a substantial research paper. Taught in Italian.
MI 40582. European Literature and the
Vernacular Middle Ages
(3-0-3)
The seminar will show how the vernacular literature
of the Middle Ages constitutes the basic root of
European literature, acting as a new model as well as
a bridge between classical antiquity and modern culture. The approach will be comparative and intertextual, works from different languages being examined
together. Images and themes will be selected in order
to show continuity and change: for instance, the
theme of love and the “noble heart”, the characters
of Cipolla and the Pardoner, Troilus from Boccaccio
to Chaucer and Shakespeare, the stories of Francesca
and Criseyde, the recognition scenes in Odyssey
XXIII, Purgatorio XXX, and Pericles, as well as those
in Inferno XV, T.S. Eliot’s Little Gidding, and Seamus
Heaney’s Station Island.
MI 40601. Ovid’s METAMORPHOSES
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
In this course, we translate and discuss selected passages from the Metamorphoses, Ovid’s idiosyncratic
poetic history of the world. Topics for our discussions include the spiritual, moral, religious, political,
and physical transformations portrayed between the
creation story at the beginning and the deification
of Caesar at the end of the text; the tension between
Ovid’s adherence to Roman traditions and his irreverent, sometimes subversive, artistic originality;
the poem’s narrative techniques, poetic style, and
structure; the significance of intertextual allusions
to Greek drama, Virgilian epic, and Ovid’s own love
poetry; the instability of gender; portraits of the
poet within the work; and the innumerable faces of
love, as presented through characters who are pious,
raging with passion, inseperable, violent, infatuated,
lovesick, devoted, and much more. Above all, this
course aims at clarifying how Ovid’s inexhaustible
playfulness and delightful wit contributed to shaping a work of both epic grandeur and lyric intimacy
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that continues to inspire poets, composers, novelists,
painters, and at least one playwright whose version
recently made it all the way to Broadway. Daily preparation and active participation in class are essential
components of the course; brief written assignments,
one midterm exam, one brief project, and a final
exam also count towards the final grade.
MI 40602. Latin Love Elegy
(3-0-3)
Representative selections from the poets of the late
Roman Republic, including Lucretius, Catullus,
Horace, and Virgil.
MI 40604. Postclassical Satire
(3-0-3)
This survey will begin with introductory readings
in classical satire and satiric invective and narrative, and then move on to consider specimens of a
variety of late antique and medieval texts written in
a satiric mode: satire, invective, parody, mock epic,
etc. A sound knowledge of Latin is required. Course
requirements include in-class reports, an annotated
translation, and an interpretative essay.
MI 40605. The Romans and Their Gods
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the way in which the Romans
conceived of, worshipped, and communicated with
the myriad gods of their pantheon. The course will
focus first on conventional religious rituals and their
cultural value, and secondly on the success of Roman
polytheism in adapting to changing historical and
social conditions. Particular attention will be paid to
the so-called mystery religions including Christianity, and their relationship to conventional forms of
religious behavior.
MI 40606. Family and Household in the
Roman World
(3-0-3)
A survey of the life-course in Roman antiquity. Topics studied will include marriage; divorce; child-rearing; old age; the way in which family and household
were conceptualized by the Romans; and the demography of the Roman world.
MI 40632. Medieval Latin Survey
(3-0-3)
This survey of Medieval Latin texts emphasizes literary texts, but some attention will be given to more
technical writing as well.
MI 40633. Medieval Latin Texts
(3-0-3)
A survey of Medieval Latin Texts, designed to introduce intermediate students to medieval Latin literature and to help them progress in translation skills.
MI 40634. St. Augustine’s Confessions
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): CLLA 20004 or CLLA 325
This course provides an introduction to St. Augustine’s Confessions, through reading of extensive selections from the Latin text, a careful reading of the
entire work in English translation, and the application of a variety of critical approaches, old and new.
MI 40661. Islam: Religion and Culture
(3-0-3)
This introductory course will discuss the rise of Islam
in the Arabian Peninsula in the seventh century of
the Common Era and its subsequent establishment
as a major world religion and civilization. Lectures
and readings will deal with the life of the Prophet
Muhammad, the Qur’an and its role in worship and
society, early Islamic history, community formation,
law and religious practices, theology, mysticism, and
literature. Emphasis will be on the core beliefs and
institutions of Islam and on its religious and political
thought from the Middle Ages until our own time.
The latter part of the course will deal with the spread
of Islam to the West, resurgent trends within Islam,
both in their reformist and extremist forms, and contemporary Muslim engagements with modernity.
MI 40681. Der Artusroman/Arthurian Epic
(3-0-3)
Come and explore the enduring legend of King
Arthur and his court as interpreted by German authors of the high Middle Ages (late 12th and 13th
centuries). We spend the majority of the semester on
the three best-known and most complete Arthurian
epics in the German tradition: Erec and Iwein by
Hartmann von Aue, and Wolfram von Eschenbach’s
Parzival, as well as other later German adaptations
they influenced. These tales are among the most
imaginative and fascinating in the German canon,
full of the adventures and exploits of knights and
ladies. Our exploration of these texts focuses on their
relationship to their French and English predecessors, on the many twists and turns in story line and
character development that each individual author
creates, and on the information they suggest about
“real” life in the medieval world. We also take a look
at some of the most interesting modern literary and
film adaptations of the Arthurian legend.
MI 40720. Late Antique and Early Christian Art
(3-0-3)
Art in Late Antiquity has traditionally been characterized as an art in decline, but this judgment is
relative, relying on standards formulated for art of
other periods. Challenging this assumption, we will
examine the distinct and powerful transformations
within the visual culture of the period between the
third and sixth centuries AD. This period witnesses
the mutation of the institutions of the Roman Empire into those of the Christian Byzantine Empire.
Parallel to these social changes we can identify the
emergence of a Christian art that defines our basic
assumptions about the role of art in a Christian
society. The fundamental change in religious identity
that was the basis for this development had a direct
impact upon the visual material that survives from
this period. This course examines the underlying
conditions that made images so central to cultural
identity at this period.
MI 40721. Early Medieval Art
(3-0-3)
This course will investigate the art produced in
Western Europe in the period between the seventh
and 11th centuries. Often characterized as a Dark
Age, this period in fact demonstrates a fertile, fluid,
and inventive response to the legacy of the Roman
Empire. The city of Rome, the Carolingian Empire
of the ninth century, the Ottoman Empire of the
10th century, and Anglo-Saxon art will provide the
primary material discussed. Themes that will thread
through this course include those of papal and imperial authority and patronage, monasticism, the role
of the past, the impact of theology upon artistic
production, and the book.
MI 40722. Romanesque Art
(3-0-3) Barber
In this course we will examine the place of art in an
expanding culture. The 11th and 12th centuries witnessed the economic and military expansion of the
societies of Western Europe. This growth produced
a complex and rich art that can be broadly labeled as
Romanesque. We will investigate this phenomenon
(or rather these phenomena) through three actual
and metaphorical journeys: the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, a journey to the ruins of ancient
Rome, and a visit to the Palestine of the Crusades.
These journeys, in many ways typical of this period,
will provide the means of examining how the art of
this period responds to the various new demands of
an increasing knowledge provoked by travel.
MI 40724. Byzantine Art
(3-0-3)
Byzantine art has often been opposed to the traditions of Western naturalism, and as such has been
an undervalued or little known adjunct to the story
of medieval art. In order to develop a more sophisticated understanding of this material we will examine
the art produced in Byzantium in the period from
the ninth to the 12th century, a period that marks
the high point of Byzantine artistic production and
influence. Stress will be placed upon the function
of this art within the broader setting of this society.
Art theory, the notions of empire and holiness, the
burdens of the past and the realities of contemporary
praxis will be brought to bear upon our various
analyses of material from all media. How we, as art
historians can write the history of this rich culture
will be a central issue of this course.
MI 40725. Fifteenth-Century Italian
Renaissance Art
(3-0-3)
Open to all students. This course investigates the
century most fully identified with the Early Renaissance in Italy. Individual works by artists such as
Brunelleschi, Donatello, Ghiberti, Botticelli, and Alberti are set into their social, political, and religious
context. Special attention is paid to topics such as
the origins of art theory, art and audience, portraiture and the definition of self, Medician patronage,
and art for the Renaissance courts of northern Italy
and Naples.
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MI 40726. Northern Renaissance Painting
(3-0-3) Rosenberg
Open to all students. This course traces the development of painting in Northern Europe (France,
Germany, and Flanders) from approximately 1300 to
1500. Special attention is given to the art of Jan Van
Eyck, Roger van der Weyden, Heironymous Bosch,
and Albrecht Durer. Through the consideration of
the history of manuscript and oil painting and the
graphic media, students will be introduced to the
special wedding of nature, art, and spirituality that
defines the achievement of the Northern Renaissance.
MI 43750. Medieval Art Seminar
(3-0-3) Barber
The subject of this seminar will vary from year to
year.
MI 43751. Renaissance Art Seminar
(3-0-3)
Seminar on specific subjects in Renaissance art.
MI 47752. Topics in Medieval Art
(3-0-3)
The topic and format of this course will vary from
year to year.
MI 40757. Venetian and Northern Italian
Renaissance Art
(3-0-3) Coleman
This course focuses on significant artistic developments of the 16th century in Venice with brief
excursions to Lombardy and Piedmont. Giorgione,
Titian, and Palladio, the formulators of the High
Renaissance style in Venice, and subsequent artists
such as Tintoretto and Veronese are examined. An
investigation of the art produced in important provincial and urban centers such as Brescia, Cremona,
Milan, Parma, Varallo, and Vercilli also provide
insight into the traditions of the local schools and
their patronage.
MI 43757. Seminar: Venetian and Northern
Italian Renaissance Art
(3-0-3)
This course focuses on significant artistic developments of the 16th century in Venice with brief
excursions to Lombardy and Piedmont. Giorgione,
Titian, and Palladio, the formulators of the High
Renaissance style in Venice, and subsequent artists
such as Tintoretto and Veronese are examined. An
investigation of the art produced in important provincial and urban centers such as Brescia, Cremona,
Milan, Parma, Varallo, and Vercilli also provide
insight into the traditions of the local schools and
their patronage.
MI 47801. Research in Biocultural
Anthropology
(6-0-6)
The Jerusalem field school will engage students in
an experiential learning environment that immerses
them in anthropological method and theory. Using
the large Byzantine St. Stephen’s skeletal collection
as the cornerstone, historical and archaeological
information will be synthesized in a biocultural
reconstruction of ancient monastic life. Students
will conduct original research, share in a field trip
program visiting numerous Byzantine sites and area
research institutions, and will participate in a lecture
program delivered by top scholars in the fields of
biological anthropology, classics, and Near Eastern
studies.
MI 40904. Seminar: Love and War Literature/
Late Medieval France
(3-0-3)
An in-depth analysis of French classic writings on
love and war.
MI 40908. New Rome
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the history of the Byzantine
Empire from the founding of Constantinople (New
Rome) to its capture by the Ottoman Turks. Within
the broad framework of political events we will focus
on the cultural and religious history of Byzantium.
Particular emphasis will be placed on relations between old Rome and new Rome, the entry of the
Slavs into the Byzantine commonwealth, and the
development of Eastern Orthodox Christianity.
MI 40909. Medieval Coinage and Money
(3-0-3)
Coinage and money during the Middle Ages.
MI 43921. Joint Seminar in Philosophy and
Theology: Aquinas and Scotus
(3-0-3)
This seminar will compare the divergent outlooks
of two main figures of the high medieval period,
Thomas Aquinas (d. 1274) and John Duns Scotus
(d. 1308), on a number of central topics in theology
and philosophy, including the nature of theology, the
possibility and degree of our natural knowledge of
God, the inner constitution of God (e.g., Trinitarian
persons, divine attributes, etc.), and God’s relation to
creation (e.g., foreknowledge, Incarnation, establishment of the moral law, etc.). Requirements: series of
short papers and presentations.
MI 40928. Dante’s Commedia
(3-0-3)
The course will offer a survey of major themes,
scenes, and cantos in Dante’s Inferno, Purgatorio,
and Paaradiso, trying to link their medieval context
with our contemporary concerns and underlining
the poetic value of the passages. We shall examine
the overall structure of the poem and its central
images of the voyage and sailing, the way in which
Dante deals with shadows, his concern with creation,
prophecy, and the future. We shall also analyze contrasting pairs of dramatic scenes and discuss different
kinds of sublimity.
Music
Chair:
Donald Crafton
J.W. Van Gorkom Professor of Music:
Susan L. Youens
Professors:
Alexander Blachly; Calvin M. Bower; William
Cerny (emeritus); Craig J. Cramer; Kenneth
W. Dye; Ethan T. Haimo; Eugene J. Leahy
(emeritus); Georgine Resick
Associate Professors:
Karen L. Buranskas; Mary E. Frandsen; Paul
G. Johnson; Rev. Patrick Maloney, CSC
(emeritus); Carolyn R. Plummer; Peter H.
Smith
Assistant Professors:
John Blacklow; James S. Phillips (emeritus)
Visiting Assistant Professor:
John A. Riley-Schofield
Associate Professional Specialist:
Lawrence H. Dwyer; Daniel C. Stowe
Adjunct Faculty:
John Apeitos; Darlene Catello; Walter
Ginter; Kelly May; Matthew Merten; Emmett
O’Leary; Sam
Sanchez; Darrel Tidaback
Program of Studies. The Department of Music
offers students a variety of musical experiences in
accordance with its two objectives: (1) to provide
all students, regardless of their major, knowledge
and training in music through introductory, historical and theoretical courses, through participation
in large and small ensembles and through applied
instrumental or vocal study; and (2) to provide intensive curriculum and training for the student who
chooses music as a major. Students who declared
their major in music prior to fall 2005 will continue
under the program of study that was in effect when
they declared. Effective fall semester 2005 and
thereafter, students majoring in music will choose a
concentration in Theory and History, or in Performance. (A third concentration, Music and Culture,
is anticipated in fall 2006.) Each concentration offers
an honors option for students intending to pursue
professional study in the field after graduation. These
students should also continue to study at least one
non-native language beyond the College’s language
requirement. All the concentrations have requirements beyond the course work. These may include
recitals, ensembles, juries, and so forth. Attendance
and assistance at music events each semester are
required.
Students considering these programs should contact
the department as early as possible, preferably in
the first year of study. This is especially important if
studying abroad is anticipated.
Advising. Each major will be assigned a faculty advisor who must be consulted in person to discuss the
program of study before a student may register for
classes.
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music
Lessons. Music majors qualify for a 100 percent
discount on weekly one-hour applied music lessons
on their primary instrument, and a 50 percent discount on additional lessons. Applied music lessons
are available for all students, including nonmajors,
for a fee. Lessons may count as “activity” elective
credits. (The College of Arts and Letters accepts up
to three activity credits toward graduation.) The fee
is charged to the students’ accounts, and no refunds
are made after the first lesson.
Interdisciplinary Minor in Liturgical Music. This
15-credit minor consists of three 3-credit courses in
music and two 3-credit courses in theology, to be
selected in consultation with the student’s music advisor. Contact the director of Undergraduate Studies
in the Theology Department.
Master of Sacred Music degree. The MSM degree
is a graduate program administered jointly by Music
and Theology. For information, contact the director
of Graduate Studies in the Department of Theology.
The requirements for a 33-credit major with a concentration in theory and history are:
Class
Credits
Harmony and Voice Leading (Theory I)
0
(Prerequisite course; 3 credits count as University
elective)
Advanced Harmony and Voice Leading
(Theory II)
3
Chromatic Harmony (Theory III)
3
Twentieth-Century Music: Structure
and Style (Theory/History IV)
3
Musicianship Labs (to be taken concurrently
with Theory II–IV)
3
History I–III
9
Four 3-credit electives
12
____
Music Total
33
Collegiate/University Requirements and
Electives
Total
Honors in Music (optional)
(One additional upper-level 3-credit course
in music and a senior project, to be
determined with advisor)
87
120
6
Students who have had previous music education
may place out of the prerequisites, Harmony and
Voice Leading (Theory I) and Musicianship Labs, by
examination.
Applied lessons and ensembles are encouraged, but
not required. Students intending to continue the
study of music after graduation should maintain a
rigorous program of lessons and applied music.
Students who want to be a performance major must
have at least four years of instruction on their
instrument.
The requirements for a 36-credit major with a concentration in performance are:
Class
Credits
Studio Lessons (1 credit each for 2
semesters)
0
(Prerequisite course; 2 credits count as
an “activity” elective)
Harmony and Voice Leading (Theory I)
0
(Prerequisite course; 3 credits count
as University elective)
Advanced Harmony and Voice Leading
(Theory II)
3
Chromatic Harmony (Theory III)
3
Twentieth-Century Music: Structure and Style
(Theory/History IV)
3
History I–III
9
One 3-credit upper-level music course
3
Three additional elective credits in music
3
Advanced Performance Studio (2 credits
per semester)
12
____
Total Music
36
Collegiate/University Requirements and
Electives
Total
Honors in Music (optional)
84
120
6
(One additional upper-level 3-credit course in music
and/or additional credits of Advanced Performance
Studio, and a senior project or recital to be determined with advisor).
In order to continue to go forward in the performance program, students must be approved by
faculty. In the spring semester of the freshman and
sophomore years, all performance majors will participate in juries. Afterwards, the faculty will assess
the level of their performance to determine if they
are qualified to continue in the program. Students
who demonstrate a high level of achievement in the
sophomore juries will be candidates for the honors
program.
Students in the performance concentrate may take
proficiency exams to pass out of one or more of the
musicianship courses; however, if they do not pass
the proficiencies, they are expected to take Musicianship I–III. (These can be taken as electives or count
toward the overload.)
Performance concentrators must present a senior
recital. (Honors majors must present an additional
recital.)
Participation in Applied Music (e.g., chamber music
class, large ensembles, chorale, opera, etc.) is required
each semester. (No credit toward the major, but may
be applied toward graduation as “activity” credits.)
Students who have had previous music education
may place out of the prerequisite studio lessons, and
out of Harmony and Voice Leading (Theory I), by
examination.
MUS 10010. Rudiments of Music
(1-0-1)
A course designed for students with little or no
musical background. Topics covered include musical
notation, scales, keys, key signatures, triads, seventh
chords, rhythm, and meter.
MUS 10090. Theory for Non-Majors
(3-0-3) Haimo
A one-semester survey of the structure of tonal music. Topics covered include chord formation, voice
leading, harmonic progression, cadences, dissonance
treatment, and form.
MUS 10111. Introduction to EighteenthCentury Music
(3-0-3) Frandsen
Introduction to the major composers and musical genres of the 18th century. Composers studied
include Vivaldi, Bach, Handel, C.P.E. Bach, Gluck,
Mozart, and Haydn; musical genres studied include
the cantata, concerto, sonata, fantasia, quartet,
opera, and oratorio. Readings include reactions and
criticisms of 18th-century listeners, and writings of
modern music scholars.
MUS 10120. Introduction to Romantic Music
(3-0-3)
Music from Beethoven to Mahler. No musical background required.
MUS 10121. Introduction to European
Romanticism
(3-0-3)
A survey of 19th-century European Romanticism in
art and music. No musical background required.
MUS 10130. Introduction to Film Music
(3-0-3) Banga
A recommended University elective music appreciation course requiring no musical background and
no prerequisites. General coverage of the various elements, styles, and structures of music.
MUS 10131. Introduction to Jazz
(3-0-3) Dwyer
A music appreciation course requiring no musical
background and no prerequisites. General coverage
of the history, various styles and major performers of
jazz, with an emphasis on current practice.
MUS 10132. Current Jazz
(3-0-3)
A study of the jazz performers and practices of today
and of the preceding decade—the roots, stylistic
developments, and directions of individual artists,
small combos, and big bands.
MUS 10133. Gender, Sexuality in Pop Media
(3-0-3) Banga
This course focuses on predetermined gendered roles
and sexuality in our culture as represented in popular
media.Special emphasis will be placed on film as we
look at, among other things, issues of sexuality and
homosexuality on the silver screen. We will also look
closely at music, the emergence of a female presence,
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music videos, and hip-hop culture. Fulfills the fine
arts requirement.
MUS 10150. Music of the Catholic Rite
(3-0-3)
A study of the music composed for the Mass, the
Office hours (primarily Vespers), and the Requiem
Mass from the Middle Ages to the present day. The
musical repertoire of each era is examined both from
a purely musical standpoint and in light of the reactions of various popes, from John XXIII through
Pius X, to the sacred music of their day. Documents
on sacred music issued after Vatican II also are examined in relation to postconciliar church music for
both the choir and the congregation.
MUS 10163. Gender, Race, Class, Sexuality
(3-0-3)
Owing to its reputation as the most “transcendent”
and “autonomous” of all the arts, music has long
been deemed “exempt” from the kinds of ideological
critique applied to other modes of cultural production. In recent years, however, critics have begun to
challenge the notion of autonomy in music and have
attempted to demonstrate the inevitably ideological nature of all music, whether texted or not. This
course adopts a cultural studies approach, focused
on issues of gender, race, class, and sexuality, to the
study of a wide range of both classical and popular
musics, from pastourelles of the Middle Ages to
music videos of Madonna, with special attention to
Mozart’s Don Giovanni and Bizet’s Carmen. Students
will learn how to listen and recognize common
signifying practices adopted by composers and musicians—e.g., specific uses of melody, rhythm, meter,
tempi, harmonic scales and chord progressions,
dynamics, and instrumentation—and to explore
critical modes of interpreting those particular musical choices within specific ideological frameworks.
Intended for non-majors; no formal prerequisites.
Recommended University elective.
MUS 10164. Topics: Film/Popular Music
(3-0-3) Wojcik
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s): MUS 11164
This course examines the relationship between
popular music and film through an examination of
film scores, the genre of the musical, musical performance, the use of pre-recorded pop songs in films,
rockumentaries, music video, and biopics. We will
see films using popular music of all kinds—Tin Pan
Alley, 50s rock ‘n roll, jazz, disco, country, French
pop, and more. We will consider the role of the
star—ranging from Astaire to Travolta, Dylan to
Madonna—and films by directors such as Scorsese
and Welles. Looking at films from the 1930s to the
present, we will consider the narrative function and
meaning of music, industrial practices, changing
social values, how songs get Academy Awards, how
soundtracks circulate, and how film relates to various other musical media, such as radio and MTV.
Throughout, we will pay special attention to how
pop music affects film’s ideologies of gender, race,
and sexuality. Students do not need a background in
music. Films will include The Band Wagon, American
Graffiti, A Man and a Woman, Saturday Night Fever,
Touch of Evil, Truth or Dare, The Umbrellas of Chergourg, Round Midnight, and Nashville.
MUS 11164. Topics in Film/Popular Music Lab
(0-0-0)
Prerequisite(s): See online Course Catalog for details.
Corequisite(s): MUS 10164
This course examines the relationship between
popular music and film through an examination
of film scores, the genre of the musical, musical
performance, the use of prerecorded pop songs in
films, rockumentaries, music video, and pop biopics.
We’ll see films using popular music of all kinds—Tin
Pan Alley, 50s rock ‘n roll, jazz, disco, country,
French pop, and more. We’ll consider the role of the
stars—ranging from Astaire to Travolta, Dylan to
Madonna—and films by directors such as Scorsese
and Welles. Looking at films from the 1930s to the
present, we’ll consider the narrative function and
meaning of music, industrial practices, changing
social values, how songs get Academy Awards, how
soundtracks circulate, and how film relates to various other musical media, such as radio and MTV.
Throughout, we will pay special attention to how
pop music affects film’s ideologies of gender, race,
and sexuality. Students do not need a background in
music. Films will include The Band Wagon, American
Graffiti, A Man and a Woman, Saturday Night Fever,
Touch of Evil, Truth or Dare, The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, Round Midnight, and Nashville.
MUS 13182. Fine Arts University Seminar
(3-0-3) Johnson
Fufills the University’s fine arts requirement.
MUS 10190. Introduction to Classical Music
(3-0-3)
Historical survey of Western art music from the
Middle Ages to the present, with emphasis on the
study of selected significant vocal and instrumental
works.
MUS 10191. Medieval and Renaissance Music
(History 1)
(3-0-3) Bower
A survey of music. The study of the major forms and
styles in Western history. Required of music majors
and minors, but open to students with sufficient
musical background. MUS 20001 and MUS 20002
recommended before taking this class.
MUS 10201. Brass Ensemble
(1-0-1) Weaver
Special groups of brass instruments meeting weekly.
Literature covered will depend upon the nature of
the ensembles organized and student enrollment.
Will not apply to overload.
MUS 10203. Chamber Ensemble
(1-0-1) Dye
This ensemble is organized according to the needs
of those who audition through the regular process at
the beginning of each semester. It consists of those
for whom the larger ensembles are inappropriate.
MUS 10210. Chorale
(1-0-1) Blachly
A select group devoted to the singing of diversified
sacred and secular literature. Performs at Notre
Dame and on tour.
MUS 10212. Collegium Musicum
(1-0-1)
Performance ensemble focusing on sacred and secular music of the medieval era and Renaissance. Does
not apply to overload.
MUS 10221. Glee Club
(1-0-1) Stowe
Notre Dame’s traditional all-male choir.
MUS 10222. Collegium Musicum
(1-0-1) Stowe
A select choir that concentrates its performances in
the medieval and Renaissance repertoire.
MUS 10230. Jazz Ensemble
(1-0-1) Dwyer
Open through audition.
MUS 10240. Symphonic Winds
(1-0-1)
This course prepares and performs traditional and
contemporary works for band in a smaller, wind
ensemble setting, rehearsing twice per week, with
a short concert tour and two concerts during the
semester.
MUS 10242. Symphonic Band
(1-0-1)
This course prepares and performs traditional and
contemporary works for band in a large concert
ensemble setting, rehearsing twice per week, with
a short concert tour and two concerts during the
semester.
MUS 10244. Fall Concert Band
(1-0-1) Dye
This course prepares and performs traditional and
contemporary works for band in a large concert
ensemble setting, rehearsing once per week with one
concert near the end of the semester.
MUS 10245. University Band
(1-0-1) Dye
This ensemble will provide a traditional concert
band experience for brass, woodwind and percussion
players in the Notre Dame community. Under the
direction of Dr. Kenneth Dye and the Notre Dame
band staff, the University band prepares and performs a wide variety of music, including everything
from marches, overtures, and pop melodies to the
traditional Notre Dame favorites. Rehearsals take
place in the Band Building. Those who are able may
register for “MUS 10245, University Band” for one
credit, although registration is not required to participate. Application for membership can be made by
contacting the band office.
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MUS 10246. Varsity Band
(0-0-1)
Performs for athletic events and special functions.
Does not apply to overload.
MUS 10247. Fall Concert Winds
(1-0-1) Dye
This course prepares and performs traditional and
contemporary works for band in a small, wind ensemble setting, rehearsing once per week with one
concert near the end of the semester.
MUS 10249. Marching Band
(1-0-1) Dye
Performs for athletic events and special functiuons.
Admission by audition.
MUS 10250. Orchestra
(1-0-1) Stowe
Performs music from the 18th to the 20th century in
several concerts a year.
MUS 10251. Chamber Orchestra
(1-0-1) Blachly
An ensemble of 10–15 players drawn primarily from
the ranks of the Notre Dame orchestra.
MUS 10300. Piano
(1-0-1) Blacklow
Piano instruction for beginners. Classes consist of 5
to 10 students meeting one hour per week. Arranged
according to student’s schedule. A fee of $190 is
charged per semester, which includes instruction and
an hour’s daily use of the practice facilities.
MUS 11300. Piano
(V-0-V)
Some prior study of piano is advised. Half-hour lessons or one-hour lessons reserved for students of upper-intermediate performance ability as determined
through audition. Lessons are given by members of
the department and by outside part-time associate
instructors. The department reserves the right not
to offer lessons in instrumental areas where such
instruction proves impractical.
MUS 11301. Organ
(V-0-V)
Some prior study of organ is advised. Half-hour lessons or one-hour lessons reserved for students of upper-intermediate performance ability as determined
through audition. Lessons are given by members of
the department and by outside part-time associate
instructors. The department reserves the right not
to offer lessons in instrumental areas where such
instruction proves impractical.
MUS 11302. Harpsichord
(V-0-V)
Individual instruction.
MUS 11303. Jazz Piano
(0-0-V)
Individual instruction according to the level and
ability of the student.
MUS 11310. Violin
(V-0-V)
Some prior study of violin is advised. Half-hour
lessons or one-hour lessons reserved for students of
upper-intermediate performance ability as determined through audition. Lessons are given by
members of the department and by outside part-time
associate instructors. The department reserves the
right not to offer lessons in instrumental areas where
such instruction proves impractical.
MUS 10352. Guitar Class II
(0-0-1) Miller
For those who have passed section I or equivalent
studies. In class II the student will develop further
the ability to play solo pieces, interact as an ensemble, and develop chord knowledge and accompaniment styles.
Each student must bring a check or money order
for $31.90 to the first class in order to receive the
required materials needed for the class.
MUS 11311. Viola
(V-0-V)
Individual instruction.
Requirements: Acoustic guitar (no electrics). A nylon
string classic is recommended. Rentals are available
by calling 255‑9343.
MUS 11312. Cello
MUS 10353. Guitar Class III
(V-0-V)
Some prior study of cello is advised. Half-hour
lessons or one-hour lessons reserved for students
of upper-intermediate performance ability as determined through audition. Lessons are given by
members of the department and by outside part-time
associate instructors. The department reserves the
right not to offer lessons in instrumental areas where
such instruction proves impractical.
MUS 11313. String Bass
(V-0-V)
Individual instruction.
MUS 11320. Woodwinds
(V-0-V)
Individual instruction.
MUS 11321. Brass
(V-0-V)
Individual instruction.
MUS 11330. Percussion
(V-0-V)
Individual instruction.
MUS 10340. Voice Class
(1-0-1) Resick
A class for beginners in voice.
MUS 11340. Voice
(1-0-1)
Some prior study of voice is advised. Half-hour
lessons or one-hour lessons reserved for students
of upper-intermediate performance ability as determined through audition. Lessons are given by
members of the department and by outside part-time
associate instructors.
MUS 10351. Guitar Class
(0-0-1) Miller
A class for beginners in guitar.
MUS 11351. Jazz Guitar
(V-0-V)
Classes consist of seven to 12 students meeting one
hour per week. Arranged according to student’s
schedule. A fee of $190 is charged per semester. Does
not apply to overload.
(0-0-1) Miller
For those who have passed section II or equivalent
studies. The student continues in all aspects of development and begins learning music of more depth
and difficulty.
Each student must bring a check or money order
for $47.70 to the first class in order to receive the
required materials needed for the class.
MUS 10361. Contemporary Song Writing
(1-0-1)
Prerequisite(s): MUS 20001 or MUS 231
Exploring fundamentals of song writing, composing
and performing vocal or instrumental songs.
MUS 20001. Harmony and Voice Leading
(Theory I)
(3-0-3) Haimo, Smith
A systematic approach to the understanding and manipulation of the basic materials of music. Required
of and intended for music majors and minors, but
open to students with sufficient musical background.
MUS 20002. Music Theory II
(3-0-3)
Prerequisite(s): MUS 20001 or MUS 231
A systematic approach to the understanding and manipulation of the basic materials of music. Required
of and intended for music majors and minors, but
open to students with sufficient musical background.
MUS 20011. Musicianship I
(1-0-1) Banga, Tidaback
Exercise and mastery of basic skills in music: melodic, harmonic, rhythmic, and keyboard. To be taken
along with Theory I and II. Required of all students
intending to major in music.
MUS 20012. Musicianship II
(1-0-1)
Exe